Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Having done my time in Nunhead, I am planning on moving to East Dulwich. Am considering a place in Landcroft Road. Is this considered a safe/desirable/pleasant place to live? Which end is the better end - up the hill or down nearer the action in Lordship lane?


There seems to be a subtle social map of East Dulwuch that only the residents understand, e.g. there is a right and wrong side of Barry Road, west of Lordship Lane is uber-posh and east is cheaper and scruffier.

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/1828-good-street-or-bad-street/
Share on other sites

Ryedale is not cheap and scruffy. It is perfectly pleasant and has 'improved' over the past few years. It's pretty quiet and is near to Peckham Rye Park, not that far from Dulwich Park, has a decent parade of shops with at least three good restaurants and two pubs nearby and a bus route nearby too. I live on Goodrich and wouldn't want to live further down the hill. Nero
yes it's SE22 so must be. Not sure where the borderline with SE23 is. I drive via Ryedale and Dunstans when going from Nunhead to centre of ED and can confirm it is a world away from Nunhead and Peckham. Not that Nunhead is all that bad.. but as I said I've done my time there and want to move somewhere a bit less dead.

I don't know if it's just me getting old, but does anyone else find all the streets around here quite noisy? I'm on Pellatt Rd, quite near Landcroft, and the speed people drive is terrifying. It seems any street without bumps on it now is a treated as an urban speedway. The post office vans are the worst ? at really unsocial hours too. I would complain but, well, who's going to take it seriously? No excuse I know.


And don't get me started on that bloody ice cream van.

it's a long walk, maybe 15 mins, but down underhill road which is pretty. If you want green and leafy and quiet, ryedale is probably better than the streets around Lordship lane. I would be interested to know what residents think are the most and least desirable parts of East dulwich or if it's all much of a muchness. judging from house prices, some spots certainly look to be more sought after than others.
directly east of the station is Peckham rather than East Dulwich. There's a steep social gradient across peckham (conservation areas excepted), and north of Peckham High St/Queen's Road it gets properly nasty. I cycle through there to get into work from nunhead and passed 2 new "shooting incident" boards this week. South Peckham (neighbourhoods to N. of Goose Green) is much better but has been sustained by regeneration money and it could easily sink again. I'm sure ryedale is far better, you're a long way from all the grot.

which is the bad side of barry road????


also the flats at the top of Landcroft Road tend to be quite nice, although I lived at the bottom once and it's better for the shops. That said now that the Plough has renovated, Bombay Bicycle has gone in etc, that bit might start looking a bit more salubrious. It looked pretty f-ing depressing on Sunday when I came out of the William Hill into the grey and the rain, having lost a few quid on Exotic Dancer.

All the usual factors apply.


Traffic Noise

Parking

Proximity to ED Station, PR station, useful bus routes

Proximity to Parks

Proximity to LL

Size of houses

Flats or houses, rental or ownership

etc etc


Once you've decided what's a must-have, the only real way to find-out is to get out there and walk the beat. From our experience of buying (and we looked long and hard) you can write-off one part after spending a little time in a couple of streets you don't like the feel of, only to walk round the corner and love the adjacent street. In fact, we ended up some way from where we first wanted to be and are all the happier for it.

Ryedale is absolutely fine - pretty quiet (apart from being a cut through from Forest Hill Rd to Underhill). Handy for the Co-op and the shops at the end, plus 63 bus to City/Kings Cross. Bit of a slog up the hill after a night out on LL or if you have loads of shopping, but you can always get the P13 if you are feeling really lazy (and are prepared to wait the 30 mins or so they always seem to take to come). Personally I like the Herne Tavern - I think it serves nice food etc, but then again I have a baby, and if you dont you will probably moan that its overrun with kids, esp in the beer garden (which has a playground) in Summer.

"Se23 starts 3/4 way up Forest Hill Road so Ryedale is safely within SE22 - Don't worry Seanmlow - you will be in East Dulwich still."


When I moved here that area was referred to by estate agents (in spite of being still SE22) as Peckham Rye. Of course that was before ED developed into a swanky area, and estate agents wanted to cash in on the apparent kudos of using its name. Oh how times have changed!

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • https://www.assistancedogs.org.uk/information-hub/assistance-dogs-emotional-support-dogs-and-therapy-dogs/   hello   i’d be interested to understand if anyone.has experience of Assistance Dogs especially for autistic children of different ages for emotional support and therapy   There was a prior thread on this topic on EDF 10 hrs ago but it had limited experiences and there was a (claimed) change in UK legislation in 2019. Whilst the industry appears unregulated/unlicensed, there are several providers (approx 15, perhaps more) who claim to have fully trained dogs or say that they can help families to train a puppy/young dog over the 18-24 months.  The latter obviously comes with a need for strong commitment to the challenge. Costs for a fully trained assistance dog are quoted at £13-15k albeit they claim £23k total cost to train the dog. On the one hand, this could potentially be a useful solution for some families if such a dog was truly trained as their websites claim and such a dog was accepted in public places and schools etc… On the other hand, I don’t think that I’ve ever seen an assistance dog of this type or in this context (only for a blind or partially sighted person) and hence a real risk of fraud or exploitation! The SEN challenge for families coupled with limited resources in schools or from local authorities or the NHS as well as the extremely challenging experience of many families with schools offering little or no support or making the situation worse leaves a big risk of lots of different types of fraud and or exploitation in this area.          
    • Hi there  We live on Woodwarde Road backing on to Alleyns Top Field.  Our cat Gigi has gone missing — it’s been about 24 hours now. She is a cream Bengal. Could you please check sheds, garages, or anywhere she might have got stuck please? And if you could keep an eye out or share on any local groups/forums, we’d really appreciate it. Photo attached.   Thanks so much! My name is Jeff on 07956 910068. 
    • Colin.    One for the old school.   Just saying.
    • Signed, and I will share it elsewhere, thank you for posting this. It's got nearly 70,000 signatures at present, and apparently runs till February.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...