(Cut to a building site. The camera pans over it.)
Voice Over: This new housing development in Bristol is one
of the most interesting in the country. It's using a variety of new
techniques: shock-proof curtain-walling, a central high voltage,
self-generated electricity source, and extruded acrylic fibreglass
fitments. It's also the first major housing project in Britain to be
built entirely by characters from nineteenth-century English
literature.
(By, this time the pan has come to rest on a section of the site where
various nineteenth-century literary figures are at work round a cement
mixer: two ladies in crinolines, Bob Cratchett on his father's back,
Heathcliff and Catherine throwing bricks to each other with smouldering
passion. Nelson. Mr Beadle as fireman. Cut to the interior of a
half-finished concrete shell. A little girl is working on top of a ladder.)
Voice Over: Here Little Nell, from Dickens's 'Old Curiosity Shop' fits
new nylon syphons into the asbestos-lined ceilings ... (shot of
complicated electrical wiring in some impressive electrical installation) But
ies the electrical system which has attracted the most attention. (cut
to Arthur Huntingdon studying a plan; he has a builder's safefy helmet
on) Arthur Huntingdon, who Helen Graham married as a young
girl, and whose shameless conduct eventually drove her back to her
brother Lawrence, in Anne BrontE's 'The Tenant of Wildfell Hall'
describes why it's unique.
Huntingdon: Because sir, it is self-generating. Because we have
harnessed here in thir box the very forces of life itself. The very
forces that will send .lelen running hack to beg forgiveness!
(Cut to a close up of big pre-fabricated concrete slabs being hoisted into the
air by a crane and start to pull out, as the commentator speaks, to reveal
a crowd of nineteenth-centuty farmhands working on them.)
Voice Over: The on-site building techniques involve the construction of
twelve-foot walling blocks by a crowd of firmhands from 'Tess of
the D'Urbervilles' supervised by the genial landlady, Mrs Jupp,
from Samuel Butler's 'Way of All Flesh'.
(Pan to reveal Mrs Jupp with a clipboard. Cut to voice over narrator in
vision with a stick-mike, in front of an impressive piece of motorway
interchange building. Behind him and working on the site are six angels,
three devils, and Adam and Eve.)