(Click on any photo to enlarge in a gallery).
Two street pictures. Anything in common? Spotting the difference seems much easier
than finding any similarity at all.
The picture on the left was taken on 2nd June
1953 and shows the residents of Affleck Street, London N1, just off the
Pentonville Road, enjoying their coronation street party. We can’t zoom in without blurring, but
everyone looks decently, if not elegantly turned out, the tables look well
decked with victuals, and steps and balustrades to the front doors look solidly
appointed. Perhaps up at the standard
that we might expect from the top end of Charles Booth’s evaluation of the
street as ‘mixed; some comfortable,
others poor’ in his 1886 survey of the streets of London.
On the towpath side of the canal, beefing up the amenity
value of London waterways has resulted in a nicely customised spiral access
ramp. These legs belong to a guy who is
neither dead nor drunk, by the way – he’s fishing.
A park on a rather grander scale than the Grimaldi lies just
over the Copenhagen Street demarcation between popular Pentonville and
burgeoning Barnsbury. The pubs on the
Pentonville side are boarded up, open-but –struggling or revamped as late-night
music dens, which, during the day, look either boarded up or struggling. Those on the Barnsbury/Islington edges are bistro’ed,
gastro’ed and boutiqued. Simulacra of
boozers, with main course at £16 replacing the white bread cheese‘n’onion
doorstop wedge. It would be nice to have
something in between. Barnard Park is a
big open space in a densely-populated area and melds several community strata
together … footie-and-beer hackabouts, urban gardening ventures, pop-up foodie
events, the patronage of politico culture-vulture Lord (Chris) Smith of
Finsbury, no less, and a group of ‘Friends of …’ working with the council. There is an attempt to confine dog-shitting
to a special dog-poop extension off Matilda Street. On the face of it, all good, except that today
it looks just a little bit bare, just a little bit empty, the fences just a
little bit holed, and the urban
gardening just a little bit weedy, and the pop-ups have popped down.
Good treeline, though, on the Barnsbury side. On the fringes, interesting bits
of infill, like these condos on the Pentonville side, with silvering
softwood standing in for brutalist concrete.
Breakout through the chicane into Richmond Avenue brings us to Islington proper where renovation in train seems indicative of an area which continues to buck the price trend and send property values notching up the millions for a semi. Not just any semi. A crescent off an avenue usually sends the values up further (no through traffic). Sometimes having the ‘right’ sort of neighbours helps too – in Richmond Crescent, the Blairs have moved out, but the Hodges and Thornberrys (not the Wild ones) are still there. Sphinxes of a more literal kind live over
the road, guarding their obelisks. Why a corner of Egypt (incidentally, we shall journey here twice more during our dérive) resides sedately in Richmond Avenue is disputed. Some argue that they commemorate Nelson’s victory at the battle of the Nile, but there is a multi-decade time gap between fighting and construction. Allusions to the many Islington place names that have Nelson connections back their claims. But isn’t that true of anywhere else in England? My mother was born in Nile Street, Gateshead (no sphinxes there, and now demolished).
Good treeline, though, on the Barnsbury side. On the fringes, interesting bits
Breakout through the chicane into Richmond Avenue brings us to Islington proper where renovation in train seems indicative of an area which continues to buck the price trend and send property values notching up the millions for a semi. Not just any semi. A crescent off an avenue usually sends the values up further (no through traffic). Sometimes having the ‘right’ sort of neighbours helps too – in Richmond Crescent, the Blairs have moved out, but the Hodges and Thornberrys (not the Wild ones) are still there. Sphinxes of a more literal kind live over
the road, guarding their obelisks. Why a corner of Egypt (incidentally, we shall journey here twice more during our dérive) resides sedately in Richmond Avenue is disputed. Some argue that they commemorate Nelson’s victory at the battle of the Nile, but there is a multi-decade time gap between fighting and construction. Allusions to the many Islington place names that have Nelson connections back their claims. But isn’t that true of anywhere else in England? My mother was born in Nile Street, Gateshead (no sphinxes there, and now demolished).
Old houses can be forgiving when it comes to updating in another
idiom, but is this a few glass and steel bolt-on steps too far? It’s probably great on the inside. Wonder what’s inside the white box.
Barnsbury Street charts further poshing up. I came to look at a flat to rent here in 1970
but couldn’t quite afford it. After
forty years earning a public service salary and a decent pension, I certainly
couldn’t afford to rent here now.
This is Henry Licht House (r). Sounds Lutheran, but can’t trace him or what he did. It’s now occupied by a company that does lighting and AV gear. So Licht has become light. It’s distinctly urban chic here – the corner shop sells only champagne.
If you tire of urban chic, country cottages are just around the corner ….
This is Henry Licht House (r). Sounds Lutheran, but can’t trace him or what he did. It’s now occupied by a company that does lighting and AV gear. So Licht has become light. It’s distinctly urban chic here – the corner shop sells only champagne.
If you tire of urban chic, country cottages are just around the corner ….
There are pockets of arts & craftsy building on
workshops, halls and churches. Door
jambs in rich rows of brick, and bits of asymmetry. Somebody bothered to give these buildings
just a little more than they needed to.
improve on its present state. No, cancel that. The library is extravagantly pleasing.
It’s 1916. How did they manage to do that in the middle of a Great War? The doorway is a little over the top, which shows up the neighbours even more.
Essex Road is wackier and funkier than bourgeois-bohémien Upper Street. Old trades persist. Someone here has taken a taxi to the
taxidermist’s. You can stuff yourself
here as well – they do tea and cake.
I can’t describe it any better than Henrietta Crumpet (is s/he having a laugh?) in the ‘London Review of Breakfasts’:
‘Ah, The Workers Cafe, bastion of socialist
Islington, beacon of light for the Marx-reading, poll tax rioting, Labour
voting reds from the time when builders were builders, new developments with
loft living were factories, and all local primary schools were run by women who
read Germaine Greer whilst chain smoking outside the school gates’.
There is a good chance that the school s/he has in mind is
the William Tyndale Primary (formerly Junior) over the road hard by the Town
Hall. Education’s ideological
battleground in the Callaghan years. Shall
we have another Great Education Debate?
Nah, Govey can fuck it up all by himself. I muse on this as I forego the Workers’
All-Day Fry-Up for a nice new British/Mediterranean artichoke salad with
balsamic vinegar for £4-95. The prices
and the hand of history sitting on its shoulder make this place popular, but in
spite of being run off her feet, the server could not be more pleasant and
welcoming to a woman with a young child, pushchair and caravan-sérail of
accoutrements and Tesco bags which attend a toddler outing and take up a space
where they could make money from six diners.
The ends of adjoining roads are blocked off to four-wheeled traffic, reasonably so, to prevent rat running. But the cack-handed concrete impedimenta that have been installed make for a weedy and littered eyesore, and a perfect environment for rats to run, or loiter at leisure. Why not have a few trees? Or a vespasienne?
I swoop down into Eagle Wharf Road (I’ve now hiked into
Hackney) and fail to help a young bloke, just arrived from Nigeria, to find
number 58. I explain I’m a stranger
round here myself, but we stride out together, both of us reassured by my air
of confidence. I then discover that not
only does there appear to be no number 58, but the units seem to be numbered at
random. He tells me that in streets in
Ibadan, houses are numbered consecutively.
We pass Mortimer Wheeler House, where all the bits and bobs
that the Museum of London hasn’t got room for in their main gallery are stored,
and new acquisitions archived. You can
see them. I try to explain to my new
young friend – best mate, actually, - we have been inseparable for about 20
minutes now, padding up and down the wharf in search of number 58 – that I used
to watch archaeologist Sir Mortimer Wheeler in black and white on the tele when
I was a lad. Describing a man who looks
like this is quite difficult.
|
The streets of Hackney around and off Shepherdess Walk feel positive and on the up.
Youth Projects well accommodated, artsy street furniture, clean and pleasant little parades where you can have a haircut, a meal, put a bet on and buy something other than champagne.
See photography
studio that runs
courses. Note to self
… must do one of
those.
The further south I go, the more I’m feeling the bad money vibe of the City, though it’s possible to look away.
If I had an eye problem I would think that clock is taking the piss. And that low-slung housebuilder’s sign nearly had my eye out. I note that our second clown of the day supports Moorfields, through the Ronald McDonald House Charities. Well, burger me! I further note that the Moorfields is now a ‘UCL partner’ – the gorgon (are all gorgons female?) has spread from Gower Street like a rash over the city, the world, the universe. Fine; they didn’t need that alumnus subscription I never made.
day there, coughing and chuntering. The carpet has had so much beer and grime worked into the nap that it looks and feels like ceramic tiles. Excellent.
Victorian planners sought to bring a weekly hot bath to the working classes to cleanse the toiling body in a steamy slipper bath, but also to ‘raise the moral tone of the Labouring Classes.’ Late or not, it’s looking very nice (it used to have a laundry inside, as well – wonder if they’re refurbing that) and the whole area is looking clean, smart and leafy enough to be shortly dubbed a ‘quarter’ or even a ‘gateway’. Finsburians, resist!
More structured and musical fun happens across the square at St Luke’s, which has, like the baths, been the beneficiary of shedloads of dosh. This time it’s The London Symphony and their partners (e.g. Jerwood) who have been doing the spending. They’ve given themselves a flexible and well-appointed concert and rehearsal facility near enough to the Barbican to carry a ‘cello on foot. By all accounts they have skimped on nothing inside – sound, space, materials – all thoughtfully tuned to the purpose. Would it annoy them to suggest that the surrounds, formerly the churchyard, would look even better if somebody bought a £5 broom from Dyson’s and gave it a little bit of a sweep? This Hawksmoor (with the help of a mate?) church has always had a tough time. Planned under the bountiful Queen Anne, it never got off the ground until she swooned away and was replaced by the first tight-fisted Hanoverian. Anyway, it was built much more cheaply than originally intended and the consequence was a design problem that nearly brought the steeple down.
You feel part of the buzz as you’re invited to gawp down into the design studios from the big, big windows on the street. I stare into the vast minimalism of the white, white sub-basement walls and the white, white polished concrete floor, and I see a posse of black-clad svelte bodies working angularly, in a combo, arms akimbo, around a design pod; circling like bees on a hive. I’m like ‘wow, that must be an envisioning fest for the design of a new global headquarters project’. As I stoop closer, pushing voyeurism to the max, I see they’re doing someone’s hair. They’re designing hair. Zaha does hair. Hair architecture.
I lose my bearings a little, mistake the Clerkenwell Road for
the Farringdon Road and find myself in Hatton Garden. Not only have I never been here before, I
never even knew it was here, and never thought about where it might be. This could be because I’m not in the market
for £5000 gemstones. I make several observations
as I pass the endless succession of identical displays: I find I can’t
distinguish between a diamond ring costing £750 and one costing £7500; I don’t
much like any of them as they all look like pasty bling; I’m more interested in
the shops that sell machines for making this stuff (how can anything bright and
sparkling come out of a chunky steel box with wires like that?). I find the people more gem-like than the
jewels. The carefully selected 24-carat
mix of London’s population are gathered here, all united by bling. They all look like extras on a film set.
I backtrack and find myself at the end of Saffron Hill. Odd, as I had been reminded earlier, when
passing this Peabody-type tenement block,
of a visit I made in 1971 to see Stan (a nickname) and his fiancée. Stan used to live in a house in Finsbury Park that I shared with nine mathematicians. Stan had moved out to live with his fiancée (I don’t blame him, the house was appalling) in a lovely little flat off an iron-railed walkway. Stan was from Wisbech and when he ordered his wedding suit from a firm of gentlemen’s outfitters there, he received a letter which said ‘We take great pleasure in informing you that your esteemed bespoke order is now to hand …’ I couldn’t find where Stan used to live, or anywhere that resembled it. Anyway, this reminded me of Alec, with whom I visited Stan, and with whom I used to drink quite copious amounts of Guinness in the Sir Walter Scott pub’s ‘Assembly Room’ – a faded, lugubrious cane-chaired chamber. Alec subsequently became a Professor of Mathematics at Oxford and Manchester, and a Fellow of the Royal Society. Guinness is good for you – though it was rather better for him than for me.
of a visit I made in 1971 to see Stan (a nickname) and his fiancée. Stan used to live in a house in Finsbury Park that I shared with nine mathematicians. Stan had moved out to live with his fiancée (I don’t blame him, the house was appalling) in a lovely little flat off an iron-railed walkway. Stan was from Wisbech and when he ordered his wedding suit from a firm of gentlemen’s outfitters there, he received a letter which said ‘We take great pleasure in informing you that your esteemed bespoke order is now to hand …’ I couldn’t find where Stan used to live, or anywhere that resembled it. Anyway, this reminded me of Alec, with whom I visited Stan, and with whom I used to drink quite copious amounts of Guinness in the Sir Walter Scott pub’s ‘Assembly Room’ – a faded, lugubrious cane-chaired chamber. Alec subsequently became a Professor of Mathematics at Oxford and Manchester, and a Fellow of the Royal Society. Guinness is good for you – though it was rather better for him than for me.
Opposite the Asian bazaar-folk and black-draped orthodox
Jews of Hatton Garden live Italian Catholics who cluster their homes and
businesses round the mother church of St Peter on the Farringdon Road – a very
Italianate basilica whose façade, a hollowed out loggia and portico, could have
come straight from a street in Bologna.
From the back, she looks like a high court judge with a pink satchel. I take her picture then get the screen message that every snapper dreads: ‘change the battery pack’. I have no spare battery pack to change, so the last image of this dérive is of a sketching panda by an invisible river. This is a pity because I would have liked to capture the startling architectural and social juxtapositions around Exmouth Market, where the classless désoeuvrés daytime drinkers loll on smokers’ benches outside the Exmouth Arms, opposite the austere façade of the Church of Our Most Holy Redeemer, the most high of high anglican (Oxford movement) churches built as a sturdy buttress against the degenerate tide of evangelicals, and a brilliant Italianate twin to St Peter’s round the corner.
I
would also have liked to share with you the last lap, on the Clerkenwell side
of the Kings Cross Road, where the contours fall away into Bloomsbury, via Pakenham
Street, where we are again chasing the Fleet flowing beneath. Pakenham?
Lord Longford? Did the godly
Dubliners also have property hereabouts?
If not, wherefore art thou Pakenham Street? We encounter more UCL tentacles in Wren
Street, where they have pitched into the hotel trade. St
Andrew’s Gardens provides a green buffer between the wings of their estate,
though I bet they would have liked to gobble it up. Death, philanthropy and the contributions of
the poor through the buying of lottery tickets have been the disparate
contributors to the salvation of many green spaces among the London bricks. 18th century urbanisation forced
London churches to take the radical step of burying their dead away from their
own churchyards, once full. When these
‘out-of-town’ burial grounds in turn became replete and closed, philanthropy
stepped in to save them from the developer’s grasp as ‘open air sitting rooms for the poor’. The social usufruct from scratch cards has
helped Camden Council smarten them up and open them from dawn to dusk, so that
those passing through can imbibe the ferny smell of damp earth, the
romantically crumbling monuments (is that a Hawksmoor urn?) and, stumbling across the
memorial stone to Cromwell’s granddaughter, contemplate what is, and what might
have been. There are mysteries to solve
here. A Lady John Manners opened St
Andrew’s churchyard as a garden. Is she the one whose
pleasing little portrait, (waterclour on ivory, unusually) is on display at the
Fitzwilliam, Cambridge? Did she marry
into the Rutland lot, and hence is she associated with the Marquis of Granby? Boozers may hold the key, as with the Pakenham Arms. More research needed.
|
I
promised you a third vicarious visit to Egypt.
If your navigation skills are good enough to get you past the pyramids
of the Brunswick Centre, taking the A-Z as your Rosetta Stone you will come across,
entombed in the fastness of Doughty Mews,
the hq of the Egypt Exploration Society [http://ees.ac.uk/index.html
].
We came across Egypt by chance on our dérive, but it recurred as though stalking us. This set me thinking about other ways of
walking London psychogeographically.
Country walks beckon … China is in London … and Brazil … Iran …
[1]
Allegedly, he downed a few glasses of ale in The Angel while researching ‘Oliver
Twist’. Not the first social reformer to
have done so; Tom Paine had dropped off there 50 years earlier to knock the
draft of ‘The Rights of Man’ into shape on his way back from France. Had he taken the Eurostar this footnote would have been meaningless; not even a footnote in history.
Baedeker meets James Joyce in this insightful and often hilarious 21st century psychoramble round the highways and side streets of islington. Can't wait for the next instalment! (Suggest you patent the PissApp - ASAP)
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