Author Topic: After 40 years' burrowing, Mole Man of Hackney is ordered to stop  (Read 1911 times)

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Offline aldo_14

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After 40 years' burrowing, Mole Man of Hackney is ordered to stop
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,,1839404,00.html

Quote
From the outside, the house that stands at 121 Mortimer Road in Hackney, east London, looks no different to the thousands of other decrepit old buildings scattered across the country. The roof has caved in. Three of the windows are boarded up and cracked paint peels from the wrinkled walls.

But this is no ordinary house. Since the early 1960s, the man who owns and lives inside the £1m Victorian property has been digging. No one knows how far the the network of burrows underneath 75-year-old William Lyttle's house stretch. But according to the council, which used ultrasound scanners to ascertain the extent of the problem, almost half a century of nibbling dirt with a shovel and homemade pulley has hollowed out a web of tunnels and caverns, some 8m (26ft) deep, spreading up to 20m in every direction from his house.

Their surveyors estimate that the resident known locally as the Mole Man has scooped 100 cubic metres of earth from beneath the roads and houses that surround his 20-room property.

"I often used to joke that I expect him to come tunnelling up through the kitchen floor," said Marc Beishon, who lives a few yards from Mr Lyttle's house.

His wife, Joy, sees the serious side of the issue, however. "We moved in six years ago and we've been complaining to the council ever since," she said. "Until six weeks ago they had the audacity to tell us the house was structurally sound. The whole of the opposite street lost power one day after he tapped into a 450-volt cable."

Now, after 40 years of complaints, the council has admitted Mr Lyttle's quarrying has put the neighbourhood at risk. Last week it obtained a court order to temporarily evict him in order to enable engineers to fill the holes with cement, at an estimated cost of £100,000 - for which Mr Lyttle will be billed.

"There has been movement in the ground," Phillip Wilman, a council surveyor, told Thames magistrates court. "He's fortunate a London bus is not in his front garden. The property is dangerous and liable to flooding."

A spokesman for the council said yesterday it had since offered Mr Lyttle temporary accommodation at a nearby hotel and removed 40 tonnes of excavated gravel and junk from his back yard. Structural engineers will descend into the dark labyrinth to gauge the full extent of the damage later this week.

For his part, William Lyttle denied that he has burrowed under his neighbours' homes, although he admitted to more than 40 years of "home improvements" on his own land. He told the Guardian the council's efforts to prevent him from re-entering his property breached his human rights.

"I first tried to dig a wine cellar, and then the cellar doubled, and so on. But the idea that I dug tunnels under other people's houses is rubbish. I just have a big basement. It's gone down deep enough to hit the water table - that's the lowest you can go."

His face lights up when he relates stories about holes under the towpath on Regent's canal or secret underground train networks. "I once dug a little tunnel out into the road for the cameras. But that's it," he insisted. "Tunnelling is something that should be talked about without panicking." The metre-wide openings seen by the few people who have descended down the shaft in his back garden, he said, were shadows.

Many of those who live around 121 Mortimer road beg to differ. In 2001, the pavement in front of Mr Lyttle's house collapsed, yielding a wide gash in the road. "You could see all the tunnels sprawling out all over the place inside - it was crazy," said one woman who lives nearby. "We don't wish the man any harm," said William Legg, 76, a retired civil servant. "He's a hard-working man - he just doesn't use his energy in the right way. Everyone around here just wants to see the place made safe."

But no one in the community, even those who remember when Mr Lyttle first purchased the house in the 1960s, can answer the question on everyone's lips: why does he do it? In all his years of digging, though, Mr Lyttle has never offered a straight answer.

"I don't mind the title of inventor," he said. "Inventing things that don't work is a brilliant thing, you know. People are asking you what the big secret is. And you know what? There isn't one."

 

Offline Colonol Dekker

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Re: After 40 years' burrowing, Mole Man of Hackney is ordered to stop
Everyone needs a hobby........ :nod:
Campaigns I've added my distinctiveness to-
- Blue Planet: Battle Captains
-Battle of Neptune
-Between the Ashes 2
-Blue planet: Age of Aquarius
-FOTG?
-Inferno R1
-Ribos: The aftermath / -Retreat from Deneb
-Sol: A History
-TBP EACW teaser
-Earth Brakiri war
-TBP Fortune Hunters (I think?)
-TBP Relic
-Trancsend (Possibly?)
-Uncharted Territory
-Vassagos Dirge
-War Machine
(Others lost to the mists of time and no discernible audit trail)

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Offline Kosh

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Re: After 40 years' burrowing, Mole Man of Hackney is ordered to stop
Whoa, this guy had way too much free time....
"The reason for this is that the original Fortran got so convoluted and extensive (10's of millions of lines of code) that no-one can actually figure out how it works, there's a massive project going on to decode the original Fortran and write a more modern system, but until then, the UK communication network is actually relying heavily on 35 year old Fortran that nobody understands." - Flipside

Brain I/O error
Replace and press any key

  

Offline Rictor

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Re: After 40 years' burrowing, Mole Man of Hackney is ordered to stop
So basically they just ruined the guy's life work, countless hours of toil and sweat in an a cramped underground tunnel, because some panicky housewive complained?

Eccentricty should be cherished, especially when it's (relatively) harmless. At least the guy did something, accomplished something lasting for his effort, even if it is kind of childish. It's easy to complain and ruin someone else's hard work, but it's alot harder to actually go and do something of that magnitude yourself.

 

Offline aldo_14

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Re: After 40 years' burrowing, Mole Man of Hackney is ordered to stop
I'd imagine collapsing the street outside was a minor factor in it.

 

Offline Fineus

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Re: After 40 years' burrowing, Mole Man of Hackney is ordered to stop
Yeah... I get that impression. If he wants to dig then couldn't he invest in a farm house somewhere and dig under his own farmland to his hearts content?

 

Offline Kazan

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Re: After 40 years' burrowing, Mole Man of Hackney is ordered to stop
So basically they just ruined the guy's life work, countless hours of toil and sweat in an a cramped underground tunnel, because some panicky housewive complained?

Eccentricty should be cherished, especially when it's (relatively) harmless.

I'd imagine collapsing the street outside was a minor factor in it.
PCS2 2.0.3 | POF CS2 wiki page | Important PCS2 Threads | PCS2 Mantis

"The Mountains are calling, and I must go" - John Muir

 

Offline Fury

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Re: After 40 years' burrowing, Mole Man of Hackney is ordered to stop
Yeah... I get that impression. If he wants to dig then couldn't he invest in a farm house somewhere and dig under his own farmland to his hearts content?

http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,,1839404,00.html

Quote
No one knows how far the the network of burrows underneath 75-year-old William Lyttle's house stretch.

Kind of late by now I'd imagine.

 

Offline aldo_14

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Re: After 40 years' burrowing, Mole Man of Hackney is ordered to stop
Those tunnels are probably full of terrorists now, you realise.

 

Offline aldo_14

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Re: After 40 years' burrowing, Mole Man of Hackney is ordered to stop
I must have missed the militant circumcision wing of Al-Queda.  Explains why you can't take nail clippers onto aircraft any more, I suppose.......

 

Offline Kazan

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Re: After 40 years' burrowing, Mole Man of Hackney is ordered to stop
hehhehe
PCS2 2.0.3 | POF CS2 wiki page | Important PCS2 Threads | PCS2 Mantis

"The Mountains are calling, and I must go" - John Muir

 

Offline Colonol Dekker

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Re: After 40 years' burrowing, Mole Man of Hackney is ordered to stop
I got an image of C&C generals GLA units armed with clippers now and a load of infantry drying.... Bad image :(
Campaigns I've added my distinctiveness to-
- Blue Planet: Battle Captains
-Battle of Neptune
-Between the Ashes 2
-Blue planet: Age of Aquarius
-FOTG?
-Inferno R1
-Ribos: The aftermath / -Retreat from Deneb
-Sol: A History
-TBP EACW teaser
-Earth Brakiri war
-TBP Fortune Hunters (I think?)
-TBP Relic
-Trancsend (Possibly?)
-Uncharted Territory
-Vassagos Dirge
-War Machine
(Others lost to the mists of time and no discernible audit trail)

Your friendly Orestes tactical controller.

Secret bomb God.
That one time I got permabanned and got to read who was being bitxhy about me :p....
GO GO DEKKER RANGERSSSS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
President of the Scooby Doo Model Appreciation Society
The only good Zod is a dead Zod
NEWGROUNDS COMEDY GOLD, UPDATED DAILY
http://badges.steamprofile.com/profile/default/steam/76561198011784807.png

 

Offline aldo_14

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Re: After 40 years' burrowing, Mole Man of Hackney is ordered to stop
I got an image of C&C generals GLA units armed with clippers now and a load of infantry drying.... Bad image :(

Waist high troopers, presumably.