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If "poor doors" are an unacceptable part of it, what should take their place?
This is all pretty revolting, and it's easy to sympathise with people who'd like "poor doors" banned.
Low income residents are segregated with poor doors and living in sheds; thousands of families live in temporary accomodation.
In Newcastle, councillor Marion Talbot, deputy cabinet member for housing, said the council believed "poor doors" were fundamentally wrong.
Redrow is, you may recall, the company that installed so-called "poor doors" in its Tower Hamlets tower.
But while their symbolism repels, the sobering fact is that "poor doors" at least open onto homes you don't need to be a millionaire to inhabit.
Similar(33)
I paid a visit to One Riverside Park and its poor door on a recent evening.
The "poor door" was hit with a lot of blowback when the plans first got out.
Well, getting rid of the "poor door" would be a good first step.
I almost missed the poor door, around the corner, where it was obscured by the glaringly red sign of the building's garage.
It will have a "poor door" – a separate entrance to the main tower – and no access to the luxury amenity floor.
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