Jump to content

Recommended Posts

by the way the expression is "Off the beaten track"




you've revised from no-one to not many- how many do you define as many?


and how far away do you define someone as 'not local' ? Forest Hill, Sydenham? I met a couple at The Curry Cabin who regularly go there from Clapham. I'm not saying that my meeting 2 people mean there's shed-loads of visitors! (a shedload based on the average 6x4 shed = 6 people)

By not many, I am comparing with areas which this one claims to be on a par with for nights out, the Clapham and Brixton equivalents. More to do, better connected, go to destinations. One couple in the curry cabin may come from Clapham, but if you take out the unique one off restaurants there is no need for people to go out of their way and be inconvenienced by coming here to see places they already have and more on their doorsteps. By not local again I compare to areas this one likes to see itself as similar to. People go to Shoreditch from far and wide, people visit clapham from far and wide. The farthest someone comes to get here is probably Peckham maybe Forest Hill. Once the picturehouse opens and M&S this will probably change. But at present, it's far from go to.


Louisa.

James, not true. Adventure bar is a small chain, all the others have survived and they have identical atmospheres wherever they are. The same is true of draft house, all surviving to date apart from the ED one. The area does not have a large enough night life culture to support multiple bars at present. Sad but true fact.


Louisa.

I genuinely don't think people come from far for a night out. The taxis may be taking them onto other venues in different locations. Thought of that? I believe locals and people from surrounding areas come here. Two separate groups of friends visited last week under duress and they all live in Clapham and go out in Clapham or town. They've never been to Dulwich and wouldn't if it wasn't because I was here and made them. And it's not like the 37 takes long! The overground from Peckham to Clapham High Street isn't difficult. And yet they wouldn't come back for a night out as there is a greater variety of bars and venues in Clapham. We have pubs. A lot of pubs. My northern home village has 5 pubs. With a population 5,000 it caters for a few drinks for the locals but not a night out location. Don't get me wrong, I'd take a pub with a fire over a bar, every time! But my point is that East Dulwich is fantastic for a night with friends and food and be home by midnight. But it is not the destination for party goers or bar trawlers. During the day time it is no different, as we have nothing special here that would draw people to travel far for it.
I'm sure other branches of Adventue Bar are doing well, but the formula of gaudy cocktails, bottled lager and blaring chart music was all wrong for the type of people who seem to be settling in ED these days (reasonably affluent thirty-somethings, young families, etc).
Thank god for that. Clapham in the evening is horrible. It's only the Old Town that's worth visiting.. but I wouldn't make an effort to go there from ED. The cinema will pull in people from a slightly wider catchment area. The good places in ED will do ok and the crap ones (Aventure Bar etc) won't. I think the new places that are due to open all sound rather exciting.

The affluent 30 something's with young families the area has become famous for still doesn't appear to be encouraging the big name businesses you'd associate with that group. Sure we have White Stuff and Oliver Bonas, but where is Jack Wills? Space NK? Waitrose? Still absent after almost 20 years of continuing gentrification. The footfall is just not there, it's simple.


Louisa.

clockworkorange Wrote:

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

> Wow. Over a coffee shop.

>

> Can I just ask, at the risk of adding more froth

> to this hot coffee school yard scuffle, how do

> local shops, by contrast to the nasty multiples,

> pump their profits back to the local community?

> Never heard such toss in my life.

>

> Please enlighten me as to how local shops for

> local people are so charitable? Surely they're

> businesses there to make profit, just like the

> neros of this world? I've not met a successful

> retailer that runs their business for the good of

> the community although I have worked with big

> nationals, including supermarkets, that take

> social responsibility very seriously and pump

> millions of pounds into charitable causes.

>

> As an aside, Nero employs more people in east d

> than say the chandelier. That's more "locals" with

> money to spend "locally".

>


Chain stores, whether they are supermarkets or coffee shops or places selling topedo-shaped sandwiches are a way of doing business that has a particular model for the society and local economy that grows up around them. Because of the way they are linked in to remote supply structures and with remote investors they have little to no knowledge of that local economy. All the demands and the pattern of business focused on those sorts of franchise models are fundamentally uninterested in the overall health and wellbeing and vibrancy of the local economy.


They are interested in one thing only. Sucking in consumer spending to then be extracted from the local economy, sent off to a head office to pay for centralised logisitcs and the expectations of shareholders and investors. They are extractive industries.


So the difference between, say a Cafe Nero and a locally-owned and run coffee shop, is that whether it is to do with who does their accounts each year or who cleans their windows every week, local businesses are much more likely to recirculate the spending that goes into their business back into the local economy which then brings otehr social and economic benefits.


Local businesses whose, for want of a better phrase, DNA is intertwined with the local community bring more benefits. Not just whatever it is they are selling but a social glue. They provide financial resources from which more vibrant and more diverse and thus more resilient communities can grow.


Lastly, and for me most importantly, they give a sense of place. A feeling of distinctiveness and uniqueness. They aren't clone towns. I recently had to go to Northwich in Cheshire. Walking along the High Street there was not a single indicator of where I was. It was the same as a hundred other high streets in Britain and incredibly depressing.


We are really lucky in East Dulwich and Peckham and Nunhead to have those distinct shops (butchers, bakers, whatever) that bring an identity to the area. Chain stores destroy that identity.

I agree that ED does not have the footfall for a shop like Cath Kidstone.


I disagree that the likes of Waitrose are not interested as we have had confirmation that they are.


The size of the units is the main issue that a lot of chain retailers have with the area. Every unit large enough for a chain has been taken by a chain and every small unit that has been vacated has been leased very quickly but interesting indies.

James Barber suggested previously Waitrose had been interested, but to me it's all pie in the sky. If they truly were interested in an area, they would acquire an existing business or buy up one of the many empty larger units such as the vacant unit on East Dulwich Road next to Dulwich Leisure Centre, or where the garden centre on grove vale was - new morrisons local site? They clearly aren't massively interested in the area as so many suggest, or else they would be here by now. It really is that clear cut.


Louisa.

I sometimes wonder if the Waitrose suggestion was put out there as a kind of urban myth, simply to garner support for the developer's submission (lots of housing in a tiny space). I guess councillors that sit on planning committees know all the little tricks of the planning game.

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

    • Hello My name is Lizzie and I work locally as a dog walker and nanny. I won’t be needed over Summer so will have full availability for a dogsitting job. I have a DBS certificate and will provide several dogsitting references as well. Please note that I can only watch your pet at your home since they are sadly not allowed in my flat! Looking forward to hear from you
    • The decision to leave the EU was a poor one, but I'd avoid the term stupid when applied to the masses (the decision was of course stupid) and blame those who willingly misled.  A certain N Farage (pronounced with a hard G rather than the soft G he affected, rather continental eh?) being one of the main culprits. He blames the Tories for not delivering Brexit, and not really clear how Labour are playing this.  But ultimately what sort of Brexit were people voting for?  And ditto what future were people voting for last Thursday?
    • "That’s very insulting! You are basically calling 17 million people that voted to leave the EU ‘thick’. " I'm certainly calling them wrong. And many of those 17 million agree with me now and have expressed regret. Many others were indeed thick, and remain so. You can see them being interviewed all the time. As for insulting, the losing side in that referendum have being called every name under the sun "enemies of the people" etc etc - so spare me the tears about being insulted But for clarity. there is a certain type of individual who even now thinks Brexit was a good idea, tends to side with Trump and holds views about immigrants - and yes I am happy to calll those people thick. - and even worse Jazzer posts a long and sometimes correct post about the failings of modern parties. I myself think labour are woefully underperforming. But equally it has been less than a year after 14 years of mismanagement and despite some significant errors have largely steadied the ship. You only have to speak to other  countries to recognise the improvement there. They have cut NHS waiting times, and the upside of things like NI increases is higher minimum wage - something hard-bitten voters should appreciate. They were accused of being too gloomy when they came in and yet simultaneously people are accusing them of promising the earth and failing to deliver - both of those can't be true at the same time Fact is, this country repeatedly, over 15 years, voted for austerity and self-damaging policies like Brexit despite all warnings - this newish govt now have to pick up the pieces and there are no easy solutions. Voters say "we just want honest politicians" - ok, we have some bad news about the economy and the next few years  - "no no not that kind of honesty!!! - magic some solutions up now!" Anyone who considers voting for Reform because they don't represent existing parties and want "change" is being criminally negligent in ignoring their dog-whistles, their lack of diligence in vetting, their lack of attendance (in Westminster now and in eu parties is guises past) and basically making all of the same mistakes when they pushed for Brexit - basically, not serious people   "cost of things in the shops and utility bills keep on rising, the direct opposite of what they promised." - can we see that promise? I don't recall it? Because whatever voters or govts want, the cost of things is not exactly entirely in their gift. People were warned prices would rise with Brexit and e were told "we don't care - it's a price worth paying!". Turns out that isn' really true now is it - people DO care about the cost of things (and of course there are other factors - covid, trump, tariffs, wars etc.    What the country needs is a serious, mature electorate who take a high level view of priorities and get behind the hard work needed to achieve that. There is zero chance of that happening so we are doomed to repeat failures for years to come, complaining about everything and voting for policies which will make things worse here we have labour 2024 energy manifesto commitments - all of it necessary long term investment - calling for immediate price cuts with no money in the kitty seems unrealistic given all of the economic headwinds   https://www.energy-uk.org.uk/general-election-2024-all-manifesto-energy-pledges/#Labour_Party
    • Regardless of “Blighty” it’s the combination of “we” “R” and “Blighty” we means there is a them  cancerian may or may not recognise a dog whistle.  If he doesn’t, we are trying to point one out.  If he does then they are trying to gaslight us into pretending they are just a lovely fundraising group with no agenda 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

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