Black mould seeping through the walls; slugs crawling through the floorboards; walls crumbling to the touch.
This is life for people living on the Nag’s Head estate in Bethnal Green,east London – some have put up with it for 16 years.
But when they try to get the Peabody housing association do something about it,residents say they end up going round in circles.
Metro has spoken with some of the worst-impacted residents who live on the estate with their families to find out what life is like.
Fatima believes she has developed respiratory issues as a result of the mould and damp in her flat (Picture: W8Media)
Fatima Tejani has lived with her family on the estate for 16 years and believes the damp and mould are the cause of her respiratory issues.
Things have got so bad,she became visibly upset when telling Metro about how she fears for her children’s future.
She said: ‘We don’t know what is coming next. We are not safe. My son asked once if we live in a tent because of leaking water.
Mould that has built up on the pipes in Fatima’s bathroom,the window and candle (Picture: W8Media)
‘Every single month there is a different issue in the flat,it is not just one problem,it is a huge problem. I’m living in damp. When I sleep I breathe in the damp.’
Her family was moved out in 2024 while repair works were carried out,but when they went back there was condensation on the windows and the carpets were damp.
In the end,they had to throw out valuable items,including her son Mohammad’s desk,meaning he now has to study on the floor.
He has written a letter,begging for someone to help improve his living situation.
Mohammad has written a letter begging for help (Picture: W8Media)
Anne Kiragu (right)has lived on the estate for 16 years,and here she is pictured with Jordi Lopez-Botey (left),Medact’s Housing and Health Justice Campaigner (Picture: W8Media)
Entering Anne Kiragu’s flat,it’s immediately clear there’s a problem. There is a pungent smell of damp that lingers in the air.
Over the 16 years that she has lived there,she says she’s experienced everything from mouse problems to condensation causing damp and mould.
‘The stress of it is overwhelming,’ she told Metro.
‘I have four children. I hear them coughing constantly,which leaves me thinking “is it because they have got a cold or is it because of the damp and mould?” You feel guilty.
Mould that has built up in the corners of Anne’s bathroom (Picture: W8Media)
‘At one point I’ve had the walls crumbling away because the mould and condensation was just eating away at them.
‘My carpet had to come out because it was wet from the stench. We can’t have carpet done because the smell of the damp will kill you.’
She said Peabody’s solution was to put expanding foam in her kitchen,without doing any work elsewhere.
Mould is also a problem in one of the bedrooms in her flat (Picture: W8Media)
She was told to keep her windows open to help air out the property,and also said she had issues with living close to the bins,which have attracted pests.
She said: ‘The bins are a joke. It got really bad a few months ago,there were just mice. I was catching at least two mice a night. You could hear them squeaking.’
The bins have caused problems for Anne before and have attracted mice into her flat (Picture: W8Media)
Kevin Biderman has also faced issues in his flat over the years (Picture: W8Media)
Kevin Biderman,48,compared living in his Peabody-owned flat that he has lived in since 2009 to that of an ‘abusive relationship.’
He started the tenants’ association on the estate in 2020 to bring the community together.
‘We’ve had everything from things like silverfish and slugs,we had really bad pests due to the inadequate bin structures,so we also had cockroaches and mice,’ he said.
‘The most worrying thing was when we moved our daughter’s wardrobe and we saw black mould behind it that was a wall of black.’
A dead mouse seen under Kevin’s kitchen sink,just one of the pests he has encountered (Picture: Kevin Biderman)
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