Litter-Ally Pally

9 Goodgymers helped their local community in Haringey
Michelle
Clare Hurst
Charlie Linton
Veronika
Nurjehan
Julie Fisher
Dave Mansfield
1 / 10
Haringey

Wednesday 13th September 2023

Credits
Charlie Linton
Charlie Linton

REPORT WRITER

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Report written by Charlie Linton

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It was a big turnout with 9 GoodGymers celebrating Nurjehan and her birthday this week. Judging by the quality of litter, clearly all of Ally Pally’s visitors had been joining in the celebrations too!

Queen Khan only deserves the best, so AA Gramps arranged a literal palace for our location and task leader, Jo got out brand new litter pickers for our good deed.

The group spread out along the grand south slope and we enjoyed the back drop of Ally Pally and the city in sunset. We found a bougie class of litter - balloons, pistachio shells, and even champagne corks.

We scoured the site and tried to pick up every tiny bit of rubbish we could find. Of course we had to finish bang on time for Nurjehan’s birthday task, so we took some great photos in front of the palace and headed home.


This task supported
Alexandra Palace
The People's Palace in Haringey

The Palace opened 150 years ago in 1873, only to burn down 16 days later. Reopening in 1875 Victorian Londoners descended en masse for festivals, fireworks, banquets, theatre and music (sound familiar?!). In 1900 an Act of Parliament placed the Park and Palace in public ownership, so it could remain ‘a place of public resort and recreation’ forever. The action continued: with daredevils, cinema and our own race course added to the bustling programme of activity. The First World War put a stop to the fun though and not for the first time the Palace was repurposed, including being used as a refugee camp. In the 1930s, something totally new: Ally Pally became home to the ‘race for television’, the BBC and the world’s first tv station. Then War again, this time the Palace took on an ingenious, beam-bending role. The swingin’ 60s established us as one of music’s iconic venues – the Rolling Stones, Pink Floyd played, followed by more: Led Zeppelin, BB King, Queen, Muddy Waters and the Rock Against Racism gig. Then, it happened again. The Palace burned down in 1980. It took eight years and tireless work to reopen. Sade was the first back on the Great Hall stage, then three nights from Barry Manilow. As ever, plenty more was happening. We had a dry ski slope, lots of bars and even a Cold War bunker. In 1990 our ice rink opened, it remains one of the hardest working rinks in the world, open 364 days a year. The 90s brought the BRITs and the MOBOs, while Blur launched Parklife here. In 1996 the Palace gained Grade II listed status. The new millennium saw the music take off – Bjork, Jay-Z, Chemical Brothers, Florence and the Machine, Skepta – and many, many more played the Palace. Our fireworks festival grew to two days. Our Creative Learning programme launched in 2012, so far helping tens of thousands of people to gain skills, explore their creativity and improve their well-being. We hosted film premieres, Red Bull racing, snooker and, of course, the darts. In 2018, following support from the National Lottery Heritage Fund and Haringey Council we completed a project to restore the East Wing, including reopening our Victorian Theatre after 80 years of closure. As things were getting bigger, better, the pandemic hit. It didn’t stop us though, we hosted food distribution centres, testing centres and local charities. Artists streamed epic performances, we took our learning programme to libraries and care homes, whilst millions enjoyed the 196 acres of award-winning Park, kept tidy with the help of award-winning volunteers. Thanks to your support, we bounced back. Today the Palace welcomes millions of visitors each year, our facilities provide vital leisure and green space, our learning activities benefit thousands, including some of the most vulnerable in our community, while our event programme not only entertains, but also contributes massively to our local economy and creates tens of thousands of jobs each year. All the while, we are making the Palace greener, more accessible and more inclusive. We’ve made it to a whopping 150 years old. A time to celebrate, with you of course, all that has been and all that is yet to come.

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Discuss this report
Nurjehan

Fri 15th Sep 2023 at 5:39pm

This is incredibly clever. It was a palatial task for Queen Khan. Champagne corks to honour me. I love it, genius Charlie.

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