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BRISTOL is known for the Clifton Suspension Bridge, colourful rows of sumptuous houses and its imposing Cathedral. 

But the homeless crisis in the city has spiralled so far out of control people have resorted to living in CAVES in the woods.

Reporter Julia Etherington has paid a visit to see the conditions Bristol's homeless have found themselves in
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Reporter Julia Etherington has paid a visit to see the conditions Bristol's homeless have found themselves inCredit: Jon Rowley
Not far away from Bristol's upmarket neighbourhood of Clifton is the epicentre of the city's rough sleeping crisis
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Not far away from Bristol's upmarket neighbourhood of Clifton is the epicentre of the city's rough sleeping crisisCredit: Jon Rowley
Caves have been turned into homes, complete with bedding and a kitted-out kitchen
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Caves have been turned into homes, complete with bedding and a kitted-out kitchenCredit: Jon Rowley
The subterranean dwelling might not be to everyone's taste - but for many people in the city, they have no choice
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The subterranean dwelling might not be to everyone's taste - but for many people in the city, they have no choiceCredit: Jon Rowley

Beneath the attractive tourist hotspots, the city has a devastatingly high number of homeless people struggling to survive sleeping on the streets.

The situation has become so dire, some of the people who’ve found themselves sleeping rough, have resorted to living in caves in the woodland overlooking the Avon Gorge.

The Sun paid a visit to one of the caves known to be used by homeless people.

The trek through woodland and onto the edge of a cliff was dangerous, past an open cavern, with narrow, steep footpaths leading to a cliff edge with a foot-wide path leading to the cave entrance.

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An umbrella attached to a metal gate signalled we were in the right place, and a tour of the cave showed how clean and well-equipped the makeshift home is.

Just inside the mouth pots and pans hung neatly on a fence. Lower down a kitchen sink hung above a pool of water, with fabric pushed into one side, presumably to filter any debris from the water.

There is a kitchen area with shelves housing pottery, cups and jugs, iron grates to cook on, lanterns and candles. Piles of firewood are kept in the outer edges in the drier areas of the floor. There is a notable absence of any litter and, poignantly, a child’s polar bear teddy sits on a rock.

At the rear of the cave is a two-person tent, which looks unused.

One man, who has slept in the cave on and off for six or seven years, gave an interview to a YouTuber known as Joe Fish and explained he was a former outdoors pursuits trainer before becoming homeless.

He said: “People have this idea that the system sorts it all out…but if you don’t have an addiction, a disability or you can’t be classified as having a mental health issue, you can’t get anything sorted.

We've been left to rot in the UK's 'Caravan City' - we can't afford rent

“I’ve got mountaineering experience from around the world, people come out (to the caves) and think it’s brilliant. It’s alright until suddenly it becomes winter.

"I don’t stay here all the time but I do pop back, stay here for a bit, see some people I know and generally take care of the place.

“It’s a bit of a trek in. The average person would have problems, you don’t want to be so far out that you become disjointed from society, but at the same time you need somewhere out of the way, so you have your own space.”

Lost everything

Several decades ago in the 1950s a community mainly made up of veterans of World War II inhabited the woodlands and many caves around the Avon Gorge.

Today Bristol has the third highest concentration of homeless people than any other city in the UK and is the second most expensive city to live in Britain, after London, according to 2023 figures.

Lee Griffiths, 49, was 13 years sober when he was dealt a devastating blow with news from his parents.

The breakdown that followed cost him everything and he found himself homeless.

Pots and pans line the entrance of the cave
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Pots and pans line the entrance of the caveCredit: Jon Rowley
A lack of affordable housing has fuelled a crisis of homelessness
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A lack of affordable housing has fuelled a crisis of homelessnessCredit: Jon Rowley
Lee Griffiths, 49, found himself homeless after a mental breakdown
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Lee Griffiths, 49, found himself homeless after a mental breakdownCredit: Jon Rowley

Ironically, he said he was working in the mental health sector, supporting people in the position he now finds himself in.

He invited us to film him as he smoked the crack pipe he is now addicted to.

Lee said: “I’m a qualified mental health worker. Mad, isn’t it? I found out in the same week my mum and dad both had terminal cancer.

“I had a mental breakdown and lost my job, lost my house – everything. 

“I’ve been on the streets for about three years now and to survive I beg, borrow and steal. When you’ve got to survive you lost all morals.

“I’ve never robbed anyone, but steal from shops like Tesco, Morrisons. I steal every day from them.

This is my life and I'm not ashamed of it

Lee, 49

“I beg, but I don’t ask anyone for nothing. I sit up against a shop and if people give me things, they give me things.

“People won’t speak very often and it’s hard, but this is my life and I’m not ashamed of it.”

Lee typically sleeps in garages or flats, if he can ‘get in’.

He has friends who sleep in caves in the nearby Leigh Woods, which stretches from the end of the Clifton Suspension Bridge along the side of the River Avon Gorge.

He says some also pitch tents in the dense, 2km square woodland area, which is on the South West side of the river, opposite the posh Avon Gorge Hotel on the edge of the affluent Clifton Village area of Bristol.

Lee said: “The way it is, I’ve got to get myself out of this situation. The government or the council won’t help me.”

Kiran Anwar has been attacked and had money stolen
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Kiran Anwar has been attacked and had money stolenCredit: Jon Rowley
Long-term homelessness has prompted residents to build their own homes from whatever they've found lying around
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Long-term homelessness has prompted residents to build their own homes from whatever they've found lying aroundCredit: Jon Rowley
Leigh Woods near Avon
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Leigh Woods near AvonCredit: Jon Rowley
Bristol is the UK's third least-affordable city
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Bristol is the UK's third least-affordable cityCredit: Jon Rowley

Shanty town

One homeless woman was looking for cigarette ends she could smoke as she waited on the pavement by a building offering ‘free tents’, near the Jamaica Street Project, which houses the homeless.

Kiran Anwar, 39, says: “I was thinking about getting a tent and going out in the country, the One25 (a women's charity) gives us help with clothes and showers.

"There’s a bakery on the corner and they’re a godsend to me. They put out a bargain basket which is a £1 and they let me just take one thing. There’s a lot of community support. There’s also a vegan place where they give me coffee.

“My parents gave me a great upbringing but I became homeless when I was evicted from a shared council property for something I didn’t do.

“I want to save some money to go and see my son who lives in Manchester, he’s 19. I also have a daughter who lives with my mother.

“My partner died ten years ago so things have been tough since then. 

Homeless help

HERE is some useful information if you are homeless or know someone who is experiencing homelessness.

FIRST CONTACT

If you or someone you know is sleeping rough you can use the alert Streelink service to help connect them with outreach services:  

FOOD

You can find free food stations via:

The Pavement - for food and soup runs:  

Homeless Link - for day centres:  

The Trussell Trust - for food banks:  

Food Cycle - for food services -  

HOUSING

Councils have a duty to help people who are homeless or facing homelessness. Contact the Housing Options team from the council you have a local connection to and see if they can offer:

  • Emergency accommodation - a place in a shelter or a hostel
  • Longer-term accommodation including independent or social housing

Visit:  

During times of severe cold or heat, local councils have special accommodation known as Severe Weather Emergency Protocol (SWEP). Find out more here: . 

For advice, support or legal services related to housing visit  or call 0808 800 4444.

You can also contact Crisis:  

For housing advice, call Shelter on 0808 800 4444 or visit: .

DAY CENTRES 

Day centres can help by providing internet access, free or cheap food, shower and laundry facilities, safe storage for belongings, phone charging and clothes, toiletries or sleeping bags.

They can also help with services for benefits or immigration advice; health support; finding work; educational or social activities; hostel, night shelter or outreach referrals.

Centres can be found through Homeless Link: 

BENEFITS

Normally you can claim Universal Credit if you are sleeping on the streets or staying in a hostel. If you are in a hostel, you can claim Housing Benefit to help with rent. You do not need a fixed address or a bank account.  

USEFUL CONTACTS

Crisis - visit:  or call 0300 636 1967.

Shelter - visit:  or call 0808 800 4444. 

Turning Tides (West Sussex) - visit: 

Centrepoint (for people aged 16-25) - visit:  or call 0808 800 0661.

St Mungo’s (Bath, Bournemouth, Brighton, Bristol, Christchurch, Leicester, Oxford, Poole and Reading) - visit:  or call 020 3856 6000.

Depaul UK (for young people) - visit:  or call 0207 939 1220.

Citizen's Advice (legal advice) - visit:  or call 0345 404 0506.

The Samaritans (health and wellbeing) -  or call 116 123.

“I’ve been attacked a couple of times and had cash taken off me. Someone was following me and took me to the ground and stole my money.

"Recently I was sticking up for a friend because they were trying to take her money and someone smashed my nose into the shop, but luckily the police were there to stop it.

“To get a bed for the night it costs £15 or £20. I get the money but it’s embarrassing. I just ask people for change or beg. I could shoplift, lots of people do it, but I use the places which are there to help.”

Closer to the city centre, workers on their lunch breaks and groups of friends basked in the sunshine on the grass at Castle Park.

But around the edges of the park rough sleepers had pitched tents to shield them from the cold evenings and rainy autumnal weather.

At one entrance to the park, a disused car park housed a makeshift shed made out of pallets, which appeared to be home to an older gentleman who sat drinking and shouting to himself nearby.

Stabbing terror

Fellow street dweller Shelby Torr turned to heroin at the age of 14, and has been homeless ever since. This year he suffered an attack by a gang of young men.

Shelby Torr, 43, was left in a coma after a vicious attack
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Shelby Torr, 43, was left in a coma after a vicious attackCredit: Jon Rowley
Tents are pitched all over the city, including the city centre
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Tents are pitched all over the city, including the city centreCredit: Jon Rowley
Fly tipping and crime have been fuelled by the rough sleeping epidemic
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Fly tipping and crime have been fuelled by the rough sleeping epidemicCredit: Jon Rowley
Joe, 34, said he keeps away from the rest of the homeless community
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Joe, 34, said he keeps away from the rest of the homeless communityCredit: Jon Rowley

Now, 43, he says: “I got stabbed in the back with a knife earlier this year, which hit an artery and punctured my lung, and I was lucky to live.

“They hit me with crash helmets as well and broke my jaw. It was caught on camera and one of them got eight years in jail.

“I was in a coma for a week in intensive care before doctors bought me round. 

“I sleep on the street every night but everyone’s got knives now so I worry I’m going to be stabbed while I’m asleep and I’ve been threatened by a gang of kids that they’ll set me on fire.

“My tent got burnt down in Castle Park, luckily, I wasn’t in it. It’s dangerous on the streets but I prefer to stay in town, although I know people do camp in the woods and on the [Clifton and Durdle] Downs.

“I’m banned from the hostel because someone attacked me with a D-lock so I hit him with it, someone tried to attack me with a knife too.”

We have all this empty land...but we're not using it

Joe, 34

Joe, 34, left home at 16 after turning to drink and drugs.

He camps in the city centre, on the pavement, away from the areas popular with the rest of the homeless community.

“I prefer to stay away from the rest of them. Fights break out and I prefer to be on my own.

“You also get trouble from the drunks on a weekend but that’s what you have to deal with.

“I could get a bed but I’m used to living outdoors now. I’m a drug addict and I get money from shoplifting, begging and drugs.

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“There should be a place where there should be caravans and tents in Bristol. We have all this empty land but we’re not using it.”

Bristol City Council did not respond to our request for a comment.

Why Bristol is UK's second most expensive city

  • Bristol's average rent is £1,759, while London's is £2,264. 
  • In January 2024, the average price of a property in Bristol was £335,900, according to Zoopla, while the average across the UK is £288,000.
  • Bristol is the most expensive city outside of London for student accommodation.
  • During the pandemic, many workers moved from London to the picturesque, bustling, fuelling housing demand and causing a shortage of available properties.
  • Rents in Bristol have increased 52 per cent over the past decade, while wages have only increased 24 per cent.
  • In total, 912 people slept rough in Bristol in the 2022-23 financial year. This was a rise of 28 per cent from 701 people sleeping rough in Bristol in 2021-22.
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