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The Peeps
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30 June 2011

Ancoats, in Manchester, was once unimaginably different. One of the world's earliest industrial suburbs, it was dark and dense, noisy, frenetic, violent and unhealthy. It was also vibrant and creative. It had a striking vapour, sound and feel.
The area today has undergone a striking regeneration. New streets, pavements and civic spaces have been laid down. A series of installations, known as The Peeps, have been created for the area. Built into the fabric of the buildings, the brass peep holes offer a fleeting glimpse of a walled-in space, a tunnel, a disused toilet, a bell tower, a gauge.
Dan Dubowitz, given the title of 'cultural masterplanner', records through photographs, interviews, commentary and contemporaneous texts, the recent past and the current regeneration of the suburb. It is a fascinating, beautifully illustrated and designed volume that eloquently depicts the common narrative of industrialisation, slow decay and rebirth.
PHOTOGRAPHY / Subjects & Themes / Architectural & Industrial, Photography and photographs, HISTORY / Social History, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / Urban, Local history, Social and cultural history
Preliminary notes: Dan Dubowitz
Foreword: Sir Richard Leese
Introduction: Lyn Fenton
1. Royal Passage
2. Canal Privy
3. Mary’s Room
4. Pickleometer
5. Dixon’s Resonator
6. Plasmometer
7. Jactin Floats
8. Drive
9. Clocking Off
10. Murray’s Klaxon
11. Timepiece
12. Machine Room