NOT so long ago, the house-proud residents of Newport’s Commercial Road spent an hour every Monday scrubbing slate slabs outside their front doors until they were spotless.
“You could have eaten your dinner off them,” says 94-year-old Thelma Lloyd as she reflects on better times in the neighbourhood in south Wales.
Commercial Road sits at the heart of the city’s Pillgwenlly – or Pill, as it’s known locally. It is a melting pot of culture, arguably one of the most diverse communities in Wales.
But, in recent years, Pill has become a magnet for drug dealers and prostitutes, lured by the huge rise in the number of houses of multiple occupation (HMOs).
The crumbling, once-grand properties are bordered by land supposedly ear-marked for development, which in reality have turned into patches of wasteland used to dump rubbish.