I visited the exclusive Coventry street where HS2 shattered the peace
Beautiful sunlight cascades through the branches on this tree-lined Coventry. Mansions, often protected by tall gates and elaborate intercom systems, are situated on either side.
On the surface, life on Cryfield Grange Road, one of Coventry's most expensive streets, is bliss. The reality is anything but.
In the not-too-distant background, the near-constant thud of excavators drowns out that of heavy goods vehicles reversing. As well as being home to some of the city's plushest pads, Cryfield Grange Road is as close as Coventry residents get to the HS2 line. And construction is gathering pace.
Needless to say, those living on the Warwickshire side of CGR, whose back gardens are separated from the huge HS2 construction site in Coventry Road by just a couple of farmers' fields, are not best pleased about the highly controversial track.
Parts of the scheme were scrapped last week in a fresh twist in one of the most divisive and long-running infrastructure sagas of modern times. The din of machinery, on the other hand, is nothing new for the residents of Cryfield Grange Road where peace has been well and truly shattered.
"I don't like it and I don't want it," resident Ann Stathard tells me on my field trip to the outer reaches of Coventry. "It has ruined the trees. From my garden I can see it and you can hear it right the way through the day.
"I think what happened last week is proof it should never have gone ahead. My sister lives in Long Itchington (close to the HS2 site at Bascote) where they've dug under the wood. She dislikes it too and with all the roadworks it's hard to know where to go."
Makhan Dosanjh has lived further up CGR for more than 30 years. "It shocked me (when approval was granted)," he said. "I was always against it from day one. I talked to my son about selling before they started doing it at the back of the house about three or four years ago. It seems to be getting worse."
Mr Dosanjh fears the road will turn into a rat run when Kenilworth Road / Coventry Road closes to facilitate more building work. "It will drive a lot of traffic up here," he said. "It's only a tight street so the grass verges will get churned up as well.
"They keep digging up countryside and they keep building roads; for what? When it's dry and windy there's a lot of dust from the site. It gets blown in our direction.
"You can hear the construction at the back of the house, but not so much from the front. It's a waste of money. I don't know what the farmers who own the land next to the line are going to do when the trains start running.
Not everyone is seething about the construction site on their doorstep. From the elevated position of his beautiful barn conversion, Terry Dillon has arguably got the best (or worst) view of HS2 in progress of any Coventry inhabitant.
Like those who live closer to Kenilworth Road, Mr Dillon can hear every JCB clunk and HGV as it ferries stone from one place to the next. Yet he's almost grown oblivious to it, in the same way as people who live close to the London overground.
"It's no bother to us," he says. "You can't actually see the line because it's set down in the gulley they've dug out. I think all we'll hear (when trains are running) is a 'whoosh' as they go past."
That's not to say he's by any means a supporter of the train line, which will link London Euston with several stations in the West Midlands. "It's the removal of trees and the natural habitats that's the worst part," adds Mr Dillon, whose back garden is about 400 metres from the building site.
"I used to be involved with Warwickshire Wildlife Trust. Now I live next door to where thousands of trees have been cut down.
"It's just a waste of cash. I'd have preferred them to have updates the trains and tracks we've already got. If I wanted to go to London, I'd drive to Coventry Railway Station, leave my car there and get the train, which takes about an hour and a quarter.
"That won't change when HS2 is up and running so there's absolutely no benefits for me. Phase 2 being scrapped didn't surprise me. I spoke to a surveyor five years ago who said it would never happen because it would be far too costly."
