Leadenhall Market |
Some
years ago, just as I was getting interested in photography, I took to going on
Sunday morning photo safaris around London.
Some
were to the more salubrious areas, some to where visitors mass and others still
to streets and alleys that will not be likely to find themselves on the tourist
trail.
Quite
a few of these came as a result of an informal online photographic project:
each week, the person organising it would set a place as a subject and those
who wanted to participate would go, snap away and then share their efforts.
It
was interesting to see how different people saw and approached the same
subject, and it also provided an opportunity to discover parts of the city one
might not otherwise ever come across.
I
hadn’t thought about this for some time, but was reminded of it this morning by
seeing #DiscoverLondon trending on Twitter.
‘Yes,’
I thought: ‘discover London before it’s too late.’
Falkirk Street, Hackney |
There’s
not been a time since I moved to London in 1988 that there hasn’t been
construction work going on somewhere. But in recent years, in almost every
direction, the skyline has become a forest of cranes as development and
redevelopment have surged ahead.
Now
I want to be clear that I have no aversion to modern architecture per se – I’ve
enjoyed quite a few rambles with the camera amid the steel and glass, but
what’s happening now is not the stuff of good or interesting new building.
Crypt window, Christ Church Spitalfields |
This blog has previously touched on the boom in high-rise towers that are soaring above us. Some of them are interesting buildings. Some – and I am thinking
particularly about the ‘Walkie Talkie’ – are simply hideous.
But
even that is not the point. The gentrification of London – and it’s happening
elsewhere too – is getting dangerously out of hand.
There’s
a human cost to this: it’s a form of social ‘cleansing’ that has been discussed
far and wide. The cost of housing long since became ridiculous – it’s now a
question of
needing to find over £400k for a home in the capital.
St George's Garden |
In
September last year, it was reported that the average cost of a home in London was £515k. It’s £272k in the rest of Britain, which is hardly cheap.
Wages
have not risen to the extent that most people can get a mortgage for three
times their annual income that will buy them such a home. How mortgage lenders
are, therefore, getting around this, I do not know, but it can hardly be
sensible and sustainable.
Off Middlesex Street |
There’s
another aspect to the gentrification, though: it’s producing a city where
character is disappearing as fast as the developers move in.
Denmark
Street – our Tin Pan Alley – is earmarked for replacement with the anodyne.
Norton Folgate, in the City, is under serious threat too. Soho is having its
soul stripped out.
Many
other areas are going the same way.
In
Brixton just this last weekend, there was a demonstration against what’s
happening there, with communities feeling that they’re being forced out by redevelopment and rising prices.
Change Alley |
The
situation is, however, complicated by
Broadway
Market, just around the corner from me, has undergone a revolution in the last
12 years or so.
Moving
into the area two decades ago, it was three quarters derelict, usually with
hardly a soul around and not enough shops to buy the ingredients for a
meaningful meal.
As
illustrated previously, in a lengthy interview with one of the very few traders who
had survived those desolate years, the growth of supermarkets had been a factor in that decay.
Pearly king at Covent Garden |
A
piece of local graffiti was memorable because it was accurate: “Broadway
Market,” it declared: “not so much a sinking ship as a submarine.”
As
the street started to revive, some locals complained. Yet apart from some
dastardly dealings by local developer Roger Wratten by name rat by nature, it’s
not been a case of losing much.
The
street is always busy now – which also means it’s a bigger employer – is a
darned sight more pleasant (even with the hipsters and more wheelie toys than
Hamleys on a Saturday), and has enough of a range of independent shops that you
can actually do most of your shopping there.
No,
they’re not the same sort of shops, but since the majority of those who had abandoned the
street for Tesco all those years ago had shown no sign of coming back, the
shops are catering to a different, more middle-class market because that’s how
they’ll survive as businesses.
Princelet Street |
Those who complained that there shouldn’t have been any market on Saturdays, on the grounds of gentrification, never had any alternative plans to revitalise the street.
Similarly, you see something similar when dozens of people suddenly turn up to protest against a
local pub shutting, having not bothered to give it any custom for years, if
ever.
In
other words, the issue is neither entirely straightforward nor bad
per se.
But
the problems don’t stop with regeneration. As has been seen across London,
rising rents then further push the small independents out, to be replaced by
franchises and chains.
Coronet Street |
Think
Borough Market – revived to foodie heaven, but now becoming ever more a vastly
over-priced stop on the tourist trail.
London
is in danger of becoming simply a sort of theme park for those passing through.
So
do #DiscoverLondon: look up above street level when you’re on foot: even Oxford
Street is interesting when you gaze above the shop fronts. Look at the street art too – some of it can be fascinating and adds to some otherwise dour areas.
Postman's Park |
Find
out about some of the places where the photographs here were taken. Maybe even
go and have a look at some of places they were taken in.
We
have a fascinating city. So take a little time to discover beyond the bland and
the corporate and the soulless.
And
take any opportunity to look a little deeper, if you discover that an area is
being scheduled for redevelopment.
Let’s
all attempt to ensure that London – and all our cities and towns – are not
rendered devoid
Look before it's all gone |
And
don’t forget that local businesses will only survive if we use them. Don’t go
crying outside that pub or that butcher or that library when its shutters go up
for the last time if you’ve never crossed the threshold in the past decade.
All photographs copyright.
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You can follow @londonerwalking, @SpitalfieldsT and @createstreets on Twitter to find out more about the
city, its history, regeneration and development.