In the heart of southwestern Sydney, where the name “Claymore” once stored stories about hardships and despair, a remarkable transformation is underway.
But in the midst of the construction cranes and freshly laid foundations, it is the stories of the people who really capture the essence of the journey of this community.
Samantha Campbell, a home -made businesswoman who once walked on these streets as a child, recently returned to her old pounding ground.
Her heart heavy with memories, she shared a raw and unfiltered look in a youth formed by poverty, violence and the always present shade of disadvantage.
In a moving Facebook -DideoCampbell painted a lively image of life in Claymore, a suburb where dreams seemed just as far as the shimmering skyline of Sydney’s CBD.
Images of burnt -out cars, served with nonsense littered and derelict houses served as a grim background for its genuine reflections.
“This is what you regularly saw,” Campbell told, her voice tinted with a mix of sorrow and resilience.
“Sometimes there were children who would be burned in a house fire – so sad.”
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Samantha Campbell, a homemade businesswoman, experiences some of her childhood memories growing up in Claymore in a Facebook video. Source: Facebook
The video shows empty and nonsense -filled houses and yes, even a burnt -out boat. Source: Facebook
Claymore has long been considered Sydney’s worst public residential area. Source: ABC
The area is slowly being revived, but some residents refuse to leave. Source: Google image
For a child who grew up in Claymore, such scenes were not abnormalities, but the material of daily life.
“Imagine being a child – eight, nine, ten, eleven, twelve – and this is you normal,” she continued.
“And then people say:” Do you have dreams? What are your dreams? ‘Like, who teaches you to have dreams, you know? Who teaches you that you can have more than just this? “
Campbell’s life took a dramatic turn when she became pregnant at the soft age of 14.
Faced with the responsibility to take care of another person, she made a conscious decision to get rid of the cycle of disadvantage that had defined her own upbringing.
“I knew that I didn’t want to see a child to see this as his forever normal,” she said, her voice full of relentless determination.
“I had to change. I had to give him more, and without knowing it, I changed the process of our entire life.”
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Fourteen -year -old Samantha Campbell knew she wanted a better life for her son when she got pregnant. Source: Facebook
Claymore has long been known as a hot crime zone with many empty houses damaged by bored teenagers and criminal gangs. Source: Spanian/YouTube
Online videos also show many back and front gardens littered with waste. Source: Spanian/YouTube
Other houses are closed. Source: ABC
For decades, Claymore has been a symbol of concentrated disadvantage, a place where families fought against seemingly insurmountable opportunities.
Originally designed in the 1970s as a vast public housing houses, it became a repository for low -income families, often isolated from essential services and opportunities.
The reputation of the suburb reached the lowest point in 2012, when an episode of Four Corners exposed the grim reality with which children grew up in poverty.
But now a new story is being written in the story of Claymore.
The Claymore Urban Renewal Project is intended to replace 948 aging public housing houses with 1600 new homes, including 100 residential units for seniors.
This shift will result in a 70 percent private, 30 percent social housing mix, which promotes a more integrated and sustainable community – and the transformation is already visible.
Google images reveal that the southwestern end of Claymore has undergone important changes, with a number of new houses and plots of land now for the taking.
According to Proptrack, houses in the area sell for a median of $ 940,000, powered by improved transport services, revitalized parks and improved shopping facilities.
But the innovation project is not without challenges.
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Residents of Claymore have mixed feelings about plans to beat and rebuild the public residential area.
However, the revitalization of the suburb is well underway with a large number of new houses that now spread the southwestern corner of Claymore. Source: Rea
A concept image of the Claymore urban renewal project shows a lively new neighborhood.
The median house prices of Claymore almost $ 1 million. Photo: Dylan Robinson
Some residents in the long term have welcomed the chance of escaping expired houses and the stigma associated with Claymore, while others, in particular older tenants, are confronted with the discouraging prospect of relocation.
Storited relocations, long -term waiting times for transfers and confusion about timing have been recurring concerns.
It means that many houses are now empty and have become a refuge for vandalism and gang activity.
Claymore even attracted the attention of rapper and content -maker Anthony Read, better known as Spanian, who visited the suburb a year ago as part of his video series in The Hood, who explores some of the world’s most dangerous neighborhoods.
The video explores a number of empty and shocked houses that seem shocked by the state of the suburbs on different occasions.
“The first time I drove through this was four years ago and I was shocked, absolutely shocked and I grew up around the hoods. I didn’t think something like that could exist in Australia,” he says his followers.
“This is really shocking. This is the kind of things you see, if you look at Docos from Detroit and it’s just outskirts of (empty houses).”
But in the midst of the disruption and uncertainty, there is a palpable sense of optimism.
Authorities are of the opinion that the new social mix will help to break cycles of disadvantage, while proponents commit to ensuring that the most vulnerable members of the community are not left behind.
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