There's A Party Going On Right Here

russ

Active Member
Ravers seize £10 million house


Revellers are flocking to this house in north London.

Squatters have seized a £10 million home to host drug-fuelled raves, it has emerged.
Furious residents of the exclusive Primrose Hill area of North London say their lives have been made a nightmare since the eight bedroom house was taken over two months ago.
The occupants charge hundreds of ravers £5 each to attend all-night parties which shatter the peace of the area that is home to celebrities including David Walliams, Gwen Stefani, Sadie Frost and Jamie Oliver.
The front of the house is littered with beer cans, broken glass and used needles, while inside the carpets have been ripped up and the walls covered in graffiti.
But despite scores of complaints, police say they are powerless to act until the owner of the property gets a court order to evict the revellers.
The squatters boast that the only thing the police have done is to politely ask them to keep the noise down.
The takeover comes amid a resurgence in illegal rave parties, fuelled by confusion over the Government's reclassification of drugs and pocket money prices for substances.
Kitty Massey, whose home backs on to the garden of the occupied house, said the scale of the raves was 'unimaginable'.
'Hundreds of screaming teenagers are turning up in droves and heavy metal and rock music has been blasting out day and night.
'It was a beautiful and magnificent home but now it is a wreck.
'I am shocked that nothing has been done to stop it. I've made hundreds of complaints in the last eight weeks.
'It appears that squatters' rights are more important than my own. The law is an ass if it cannot control criminal activity of this nature.'
She said the home, which is set on an acre of land on Radlett Place, was bought by a Russian businessman last year.
Jane Anderson-Craig who lives near the house said the parties were highly organised and well-advertised.
'The squatters are charging the guests to come in and making a small fortune selling them cans of beer and drugs.
'The police say there is very little they can do and that they are at the mercy of the squatters until they get a court order.
'In the meantime the residents are suffering and are frightened to go out at night.'
The squatters have fitted metal grills over the windows and pasted a notice to the front door declaring: 'Take notice that we live in this property. It is our home and we intend to stay here.'
Inside three stages have been erected for DJs to perform on and signs have been put up over makeshift bars selling cans of beer at £2.50 each and spirits at £2 a shot.
Cans and bottles litter the floor of the house which has been 'decorated' with graffiti covered walls and psychedelic flags.
Upstairs en-suite bedrooms have been turned into communal sleeping areas where at least eight punk squatters are living.
One squatter, sporting a huge green mohican haircut and nose piercings, said: 'All we were doing was having peace parties, man.
'The police came round but they were fine with it, they just asked us to turn the music down.'
A DJ who played in the most recent party said: 'I think people have the right to party in beautiful houses with beautiful gardens.'
A police spokesman said: 'Officers are aware of the problems residents have been experiencing in regard to excess noise and are liaising with the council and residents to try and resolve the matter.'
Last week nine police officers were injured by an angry mob of partygoers as they tried to stop an illegal rave in Great Chesterford, near Saffron Walden, Essex.





Mrs Russ and I took a walk round to this place earlier this eve. It really is in Proper Celeb Land Primrose Hill. Its in the next street to David Walliam's place (which used to be Noel Gallagher's Supernova Heights)

Its a very quiet road, more like an alley really and the house backs right onto Regents Park.

There appeared to be people (journalists?, Police?) hanging around.

PLUR!
 
The place is "believed to be owned by a Russian businessman" according to The Sun. Would be fun to find out who that is...
 
The place is "believed to be owned by a Russian businessman" according to The Sun. Would be fun to find out who that is...

and to find out if he is the sort of person who doesn't take to kindly to people 'touching my property'



pics

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a trashed house







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an unhappy neighbour. ha ha ha


all pics from http://images.thesun.co.uk
 
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Do you think they invited the neighbours before the party started ? My mum always said it was good etiquate to do that as it reduces complaints.

BTW - I'm sure if someone slipped her a cheeky half she'd be dancing on the speakers with a can of Strongbow in her hand ;)
 
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Do you think they invited the neighbours before the party started ? My mum always said it was good etiquate to do that as it reduces complaints.

BTW - I'm sure if someone slipped her a cheeky half she'd be dancing on the speakers with a can of Strongbow in her hand ;)

Does she look like an owl to anyone else? Where´s Grego?
 
0,,2006401219,00.jpg


Do you think they invited the neighbours before the party started ? My mum always said it was good etiquate to do that as it reduces complaints.

BTW - I'm sure if someone slipped her a cheeky half she'd be dancing on the speakers with a can of Strongbow in her hand ;)

Bloody hell - I often wondered whatever happened to Dr Ruth..:lol: :lol: :lol:
 
and to find out if he is the sort of person who doesn't take to kindly to people 'touching my property'
And if he is that type of person, it might also behoove the party organizers to find out if he's got..... connections 8O
 
I like how the press are calling these parties 'raves' yet it seems to be punks with 'heavy metal and rock music' playing.

Why don't the police just do them for selling alcohol on premises without a license?
 
Someone posted in another thread that the Press have latched back onto Ibiza as a den of iniquity after having left the subject relatively alone for a few years.

Illegal raves are also back as a flavour of the month topic. Once one newspaper does a breathless expose-type piece (cf that piece of crud in the Observer last week), others feel the need to follow suit and there is a spate of cloned, hyped up stories for a while.

For example, last year and the one before, the Ibiza "story" in papers from the tabs to the qualities was all about how house music was dead and the big clubs were suffering from an unprecedented downturn as the "kids" opted for rock and indie. No newspaper will have noticed (and if they did, they wouldn't care) the glaring inconsistency of the editorial lines taken on Ibiza in 2004/5 compared with 2006. And, with typical Brit-centric insularity, they also did not bother to do enough research to realise that while dance music's popularity in Britain may have ebbed a bit - certainly enough to cause a magazine like Muzik to have to shut - it has continued to grow worldwide in a fashion more than ample enough to sustain Ibiza's position as the world clubbing capital.

Because very few Fleet Street news reporters are also ravers (the ones who are definitely don't tell their news desks), and their editors have even less of a clue, having spent too many years in newsrooms with little or no natural light climbing the greasy career pole, you get this hilariously inaccurate reporting.

It'll die down when the weather gets cold(er).

Meanwhile, just sit back and laugh as Fleet Street gets it wrong. Again.
 
A few years ago, some of the papers used to have writers whose job it was to explain to squares the weird and wonderful flora and fauna of "club culture": people like Alix (sic) Sharkey at the Indy and Jacques Peretti at the Guardian.

Sign of the times - whereas Peretti used to write about getting twatted in a field, he's now one of those navel-gazers who pen endless columns about their children and adventures in nappy-changing.
 
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