You could blindfold yourself in Seven Sisters, spin around a few times, and throw a dart in any direction (although I wouldn't recommend it), and there is about a 4% chance that you will hit a musician with it. The place is positively teaming with them. Studios, and musician flat-shares, everywhere. And it is easy to see why. Firstly, it is a little "rough around the edges" Not in a bad way too. What it lacks in clean lines, 5 year plans and commercial aesthetics, it more than makes up for in atmosphere and vibrancy. It's unlike any other area in London.
Here is something that says a lot about the area. There was a Pound Store there. (Not the big chain, an independent one). Someone set up a shop called "99p or less." In an act of business bravado that was mind-blowingly simple as it was brilliant, someone down the road set up the "98p shop". (Right now, in Tottenham, someone is plotting the opening of the 97p store...) It's that sort of place. Shopkeepers live on their wits, you can bargain with them. I once bought 2 suitcases that were £35 each for £39 in total, and the shopkeeper seemed happier with my purchase than the guy before who paid full price for his parrot cage. Yep, a parrot cage and suitcases being sold in the same shop. That's West Green Rd.
There is a road with 19 African churches on it too, Lawrence Rd. This isn't the longest road in the area by the way, you can walk it in about 4 mins. The local community centre is called the Bernie Grant Arts centre, and has the Marcus Harvey Library in it. Not some 16th century aristocrat who many people fire up wikipedia to find out who he is, but men who meant something to the people there, in the late Local Labour MP Bernie Grant, the first British Black politician, and Marcus Garvey, the Jamaican Political leader who died in 1940.
Some
roads in London have an African shop. West Green Rd has a Ghanian
shop, an Ethiopian Shop, a Kenyan Shop, etc. I used to work as a
Butcher, and used to do shifts as a fishmonger on the side. There
are fish shops selling fish I had never heard of there. Instead of
the local travel shop having promotional deals to Barcelona, Paris
and New York, instead there are trips in Nairobi, Kingston Jamaica
and Akra. Now, I probably have more need of a cheap flight to New
York, rather than Ghana, if I am honest - but the difference is that
99% of all of the travel agent shop windows in London show the prices
to the same places. These ones do not. Instead of a package
holidays, it's flights only. These people are not going away for a 2
week holiday in the sun, they are making a pilgrimage home. Not many
people based in the area have family in New York, compared to Ghana,
Nigeria and the Caribbean. Thus, these shops are actually
representative of the area. The products they sell are actually
tailored to the area, as opposed to being a homogenized
Starbucks-Costa Coffee-Pizza Express parade of the usual suspects.
What a novel idea!! They are shops by the people of the area, for the people of the area. Instead of a multinational company deciding what their customers want, and convincing them that they want it, these shops have a different approach. As the sign in a shop window a few weeks ago said: "We book tickets to anywhere. Ask Amin for details." Amin. Not "your local store manager". Ask Amin, he'll sort it out for you. There is no Starbucks. No "head of marketing and brand development." The guy who cashes up and signs the lease is the same guy who mops the floor at the end of the day. It is business as it should be, and as a business owner in the area, I have to admit that sometime I walk down the road, and get a great feeling from seeing these independent business owners go about their trading. And that is because I actually feel part of the community here. I feel that I am actually contributing to the area, and I feel that I know the other people that are too.
What a novel idea!! They are shops by the people of the area, for the people of the area. Instead of a multinational company deciding what their customers want, and convincing them that they want it, these shops have a different approach. As the sign in a shop window a few weeks ago said: "We book tickets to anywhere. Ask Amin for details." Amin. Not "your local store manager". Ask Amin, he'll sort it out for you. There is no Starbucks. No "head of marketing and brand development." The guy who cashes up and signs the lease is the same guy who mops the floor at the end of the day. It is business as it should be, and as a business owner in the area, I have to admit that sometime I walk down the road, and get a great feeling from seeing these independent business owners go about their trading. And that is because I actually feel part of the community here. I feel that I am actually contributing to the area, and I feel that I know the other people that are too.
Another great place is the South American
Indoor market that is right next to the entrance of Seven Sisters
station. Its a fantastic indoor market,
where the sellers and shop staff have personality and rapport with
their customers. (I once went into a shop on the road, just outside
the market, looking for a deal on some soft drinks, and the shop
owner shouted down into the basement, "Dex? I'm sending a guy
down to see you, sort out some cheap drinks for him. He's might
order some extra stuff off us, so don't f**k up his order, right?"
To be fair, he didn't f**k up my order, which I was glad for.) The
shops might not be on the same scale as the Westfield, but nor should
it be. The best selling point of the area as a whole is that, when
people say to me "What's it like", it takes me about 3 mins
to explain it all. It usually ends with me saying "Well, you
should go there." Sure, many of the stores are a bit rundown,
and need a bit of a clean up, but it's all part of the character for
me.
Aside
from this vibrancy, which is it's greatest selling point, there are
other good points too. Transport is great. Central London in 15
mins. The buses are good. Night buses too. Many of the properties
rival Northumberland Park in terms of size and quality. More bands
that come to the studios come from Seven Sisters rather than any
other area, and a lot of them are working in the city, or students,
looking for more bang for their buck within the rental market. If
you;re looking for that, as Bally Studios staff can personally
testify, there are worse areas than Seven Sisters.
Of
course, the area is not perfect, not by a long stretch. There are
prime buildings that have sat empty for 10+ years. The building that
used to be the bank, right on the corner next to the station,and
Wards Corner, the empty building opposite, both have huge potential.
But alas, they have been empty for years, and that is sad. It is
also very hard for the local shops to compete with the local Tesco.
Maybe this is the reason that all of the shops that are in the area
specialise in the sort of food that Tesco would not usually handle.
This
part of Tottenham has been in the news recently, as many of the
residents are concerned with plans to open a shopping arcade in the
area. We have touched upon in in our Blog post in the area, and our
views on the subject are mixed. On one hand, the jobs for the area
will be great, and hopefully it might encourage people to visit the
area. However it is also hard enough for the local businesses to
survive while being in competition with Tesco, so we hope that this
is taken into effect when the local council decide whether to press
ahead with the plans, as it would be a real shame to lose so many of
these great shops that already add to the area. More details are
here. http://sevensistersregeneration.co.uk/
The
Best Parts:
The
shops of West Green Road.
Transport
Links
Room
For Improvement:
Let's
hope that the council decides to make sure that the current South
American Market can, in some way, be saved, while still redeveloping
the area.
You really sell the area well Jimmy!
ReplyDeleteIt'd be a real shame if a Tesco did come in and bully it's way into setting up an onslaught of "..homogenized Starbucks-Costa Coffee-Pizza Express parade of the usual suspects." Good to see you have such pride in your local area. Hope your business is going well.
Michael Mc
lool
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