Jump to content

Recommended Posts

I think Clapham is great. It is so big and diverse that it is hard to stereotype it. Nortcote Road end is much quieter and was my favourite bit - I haven't been there for about 12 months. The Commons are great and so too is the high street. Other highlights are some the bars like Artesian Well etc... and nice boozers to boot. Bierorome and Microbar are other highlights of the area and the bongo drum man who used to play in All bar One.

White House was great but it has got rougher as time has worn on and I for one won't ever go in there again. Fresh and Wild is great too. Both are good in my book.

I was born in London and love it. However most of it is a dump.. there are a few places which are worth living in and Dulwich and Clapham are two of them. Anywhere you don't have to leave at weekends is good.. others include Barnes and Blackheath which are also islands surrounded by crap (I can't speak for North London but people seem to like Crouch End for the same reason).


One of ED's pros and cons is it's public transport, it's a pain not being on the tube but it does help keep the riff-raff out. Clapham Common is great but horrible in the summer when the great unwashed ship in on the tube.

Having been encouraged to move by many here, I've taken to searching for a placed that meets my needs. I'm keen for lovely period housing stock, all amenties on the doorstep, a lovely feel on the streets, and excellent transport links - close to Central London.


I've spent some time in Clapham just recently. To me, it feels like the its own suburban city well outside of central London. It's a bit of a dull high street too.


Dulwich is too far outside of London with poor transport links in, same for Blackheath. For me, I would shy from going into Central London of a weekend because it's an investment of hours (few trains an hour, wait wait wait, then coming back the same). Clapham is bit better on that score, but still a while out.


Right now, top of the list is Kennington. Some lovely stock (Georgian!) and terribly close to Central London by tube or by many buses. Amentities are very good and while there isn't a booming bar/club/restaurant scene, there is just enough should you stay home and heading into town can be a quick trip without losing a huge chunk of the day.


And you can easily walk to Vauxhall where I club quite often and partake in all sorts of substances. Okay, that's a lie. But my mind is opening to legalisation so who knows, maybe I'll rediscover my (long gone) youth.

???? Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I remember when Clapham was a downmarket toilet

> rather than the upmarket toilet it is nowadays



I remember when they discovered an IRA bomb factory on Northcote Road. Happened the same day as Lockerbie, so didn't make the headlines obviously.

We browsed in Kennington before plumping for ED. It wasn't the wrong decision.


Kennington has some 'great stock' as you say - Georgian squares and the like - and affordable (for you). But the reason they're affordable is because they're in Kennington. In your case it might be out of the frying pan into the fire.

We found it a little desolate (and suffering from all the usual problems that you have in Camberwell) with pleasant pockets - but, despite really wanting that flat-fronted Georgian dreamboat, pleasant pockets weren't enough.

Since this thread is here, I'm going to chuck in a plug for my mate Nathan. He's the friendly Aussie guy who used to run the CPT (his sister still does).


Nathan runs The George which is on the main road between Clapham South and Balham. If you're in the area, it's a nice pub, and very good for watching sport.

I moved from one of the Georgian squares in Kennington to ED. I loved living there but wanted more green space and a house with garden rather than a flat for the same money (drug riddled Kennington Park doesnt count).


I agree re the transport though - I used to walk to work in the City in 45 mins, the tube is great, and it saves a fortune on taxis. The pubs and restaurants are great (big up to the Dog House), and you can walk to Borough for decent food on Saturdays.


Horses for courses - it was great for me as a girl about town with no family, but ED is nicer now I'm a pram pusher.


If you can afford it and dont have those worries, I would go for it.


Watch out at the Tesco though - its a bit stabbing central.

i loved clapham. i was like the mayor of clapham. i knew so many people,party places, had a flat right by the railway moved there from peckham rye in 84. all the places like valencia place , wild gallery type events. acid house parties you name it clapham rocked on so many levels. then almost overnight, all those empty buildings were gone, wealthy kids felt safer in brixton as the gentrification began. i remember it was ecco pizza and la rueda brought the new faces in claphamwsise. the flipping dogstar opened the door to brixton.

nother scene killa.

I screamed and punched and kicked to not move away. east dulwich was like torture distance from passport control. but my girl wanted here.

kid was right. clapham is now a cattle market and this place here is king. the people i am meeting now stun me with talent and outlook. my new friends are the greatest and i think my roots are too deep now to want for anywhere else. I mean i get more done here.totally creative from the moment i arrived. In clapham the door bell rang too much. the place seems so desperate now.seems like you have to try to have fun.most people i know are gone from there. I hardly ever even drive through the place.seems weird to say that. I worked in zeitgeist the original gift shop in old town. you dont get more central clapham than that.now, the soul of the place is dead. I remember djing with trapeze artists over my head and street parties we organised bunting and all.the wedding where the bride and groom arrived on the yellow scorpion tank, hanging off the turret with bottles of champagne.

I just dont think that attitude works there anymore. no connection between the occupants of a street.

Last night i was at the godawful beauberry house , standing next to the awesome conga player in the dancing room. made my day. i love that latin style. you dont find that in clapham any more.

Im a few vodkas down.but you got me going on this. Foxtons invasion or not, this place rules.Andreas food stall fri sat northcross, the record store there the bread store, the horniman, (lordship lane meh!) the parks. the big windows, peckham, nothing like it was 82. much better. the herne, rye, bish,edt(meh!), loads of em. sure theres a few 'brigadier mums' about but you wanna hang in clap junction. squillions of em. less here. I got home scorching late last night, walked home from only 2 minutes away. Im very happy to be here. all about me innit. hope you can relate to it.

London, particularly south London, is all about pockets. Including East Dulwich.


In fact, having examined crime stats (I know I'm sad), Kennington ranks better than most. Though there is a pocket heading east (surprise surprise toward Camberwell) that's a bit dodgy. But that's about the same geography for East Dulwich heading back to Peckham.


I ate in the new park cafe and was told all about the massive transformation in the last two years with much more to come. It seems to have done an East Dulwich. The houses I'm keen on are more expensive in Kennington than ED, but you are paying for a more central, better connected location.


And if you think it's worse than Camberwell (or better than ED), than you haven't spent much time there. But I'm not sure. Will be looking further. But for now, for housing stock, central, good transport, nice neighbourhoods, good amentities, Kennington appears to be winning out in South London. ED is good for the pram set, but it is suburban, out of town and hard to get to....great if you've kids.

I have lived in both and can only sum it up by saying that I thought I liked Clapham until I moved to ED. Looking back I think I liked the idea of living in Clapham which makes me a sad bastard. (Fitted in in Clapham then).


In summary, ED is miles above Clapham which is, as mentioned somewhere above, an Upmarket toilet! Full of junkies and f-reaks!

I grew up in and around Kennington and still have a few rellies living there. I like it but agree with asset that there isnt really a nucleus. Some of the garden squares are gorgeous and have quite a little community going on ie, West Square, Walcot Square, St Mary's Gardens etc but these are terribly expensive.

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

    • In 2016 London City Airport began using concentrated flight paths. When there's a predominantly westerly wind, incoming aircraft approach from East London (north of the River. When there's a predominantly Easterly wind, incoming aircraft approach the airport from the West: circling through Forest Hill, Dulwich, Vauxhall, Tower Hamlets, Docklands. This latter flight path affects many of us in South East London. https://www.london.gov.uk/who-we-are/what-london-assembly-does/questions-mayor/find-an-answer/london-city-airport-concentrated-flight-paths The planes going into City are often below 2,000 ft, so very noisy. Sometimes we have incoming Heathrow at the same time, flying higher. The early flights that I hear e.g. 04:30 are incoming to Heathrow. They are scheduled to land at 05:30 but are 'early'. Apparently the government allows a percentage of flights to arrive early and late (but these are now established as regular occurrences, informally part of the schedule). IMHO Londoners are getting very poor political representation on this issue. Incredible that if you want to complain about aircraft noise, you're supposed to contact the airport concerned! Preposterous and designed solely in favour of aviation expansion.
    • Yet another recommendation for Jafar. Such a nice guy, really reliable and fair. He fixed a problem with our boiler and then incredibly kindly made two more visits to replace a different part at no extra cost. 
    • I didn't have any problems with plane noise until city airport started flying planes to and from about 5-8 minutes apart from 5.30 am or  6 am,  and even with ear plugs and double glazing I am woken at about 6 well before I usually would wake  up. I have lived here since 1986 and it is relatively recently that the planes have been flying far too low over East dulwich. I very much doubt that they are headinbg to Heathrow or from Heathrow. As the crow flies we are much , MUCH closer to City Airport than Heathrow or Gatwick. I even saw one flying so low you could see all the windows, when I was in Peckham Rye Park.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

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