Property

  • London's up-and-coming neighbourhoods

  • Photography Scott Wishart

  • Whether you’re looking to rent or buy your next home, these up-and-coming areas are well worth considering - but which one should you choose? Check out our area guides to help you weigh up what each neighbourhood has to offer

    London's up-and-coming neighbourhoods

    Fairfield Road, Bow



  • Bow | Walthamstow | Clapton | Harringay | Deptford | Tooting

    Bow area guide
    Overview
    The north-east corner of Tower Hamlets has some excellent Victorian housing, particularly in the Tredegar conservation area, and Zealand and Chisenhale Roads. The area was named as long ago as 1110 after the Bow Bridge over the River Lee.

    Arts and culture
    A converted nunnery on Bow Road provides a dramatic gallery setting for the 100 or so artists billeted with nearby studio space by the Bow Arts Trust (The Nunnery gallery, 181-183 Bow Road, E3 2SJ; 7538 1719). The Chisenhale Dance Space, located in a warehouse overlooking the canal, has studios for hire and runs dance classes for children and adults. The Ragged School Museum was once the school run by Dr Barnardo, and is now dedicated to examining Victorian education and East End history. And Comedy fans will be pleased to find an outpost of Jongleurs at Bow Wharf on the area's north-east perimeter (head north along the Regent's Canal from Mile End Station) – though watch out for rapid packs of stag and hen dos at weekends. Feature continues

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    Food and drink
    This being the East End, there’s a proper pie-and-mash shop, G Kelly, which has been open since 1937. The Morgan Arms is a brilliant gastropub on the corner, with great decor, quality ales and classy bar snacks. Or for a more traditional boozer, the cosy Palm Tree (127 Grove Road, Mile End, E3 5BH; 8980 2918) boasts, among other nice features, a manual cash till and a canalside patch of greenery. The Britannia pub, on the north side of Victoria Park, offers a spacious beer garden, regular film screenings and a refined gastropub menu – which has earned the place a nomination in this year's Time Out Eating & Drinking Awards.

    Local amenities
    Mile End Park is pleasant, and has a leisure centre and climbing wall. Victoria Park to the north is much bigger and great for a walk, as well as home to music festivals (Field Day and Lovebox among others). A rummage through Roman Road Market, which shifts clothes, food and odds and ends each Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, is as authentic a gobbet of lively East End life as you’re likely to find.

    Bow | Walthamstow | Clapton | Harringay | Deptford | Tooting

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21 comments

  1. Posted by A H on 03 Oct 2009 18:22

    I can't believe this is a review of Tooting. As the other commenter said, the Bedford is most definitely in Balham. The Garden House was renamed some months ago the Manor House. It could have been spot on for the area but somehow they missed the spot... Decor and lighting not quite right and food hit and miss... As for the Trafalgar, back in the day it was fab with its drag queens and glitter, but these days it's pretty mediocre. Not sure what the reviewer means by the 'gloriously mixed' clientele but sounds maybe just a tad patronising... The Selkirk is good and the two new additions (The Tramshed and the Antelope) are by far the most exciting things Tooting has seen for a long time. Sette Bello does fab pizza. I'm not sure how they picked the two Indian restaurants they mentioned but there are many many others that are great... Please ask someone who has actually been to Tooting or lives there to write these reviews in the future....

  2. Posted by Frances on 16 Sep 2009 19:28

    Has the person who reported on Tooting ever actually been there?
    1) The Bedford is in Balham - why is it mentioned here? The Selkirk, which is actually in Tooting, also does comedy nights, and a pub quiz
    2) The Garden House has been called The Manor for months now.
    3) No mention of new arrivals the Tooting Tram & Social (opened for at least a year now) and the Antelope???? These are pubs people who live outside of Tooting travel to. Definitely worth a mention. Or the Ramble or Smoke for some old favourites.
    4) Everyone knows Tooting is good for curry, but there are other restaurants too. No mention of those????
    Sigh.

  3. Posted by Nik on 11 Sep 2009 12:41

    Olde Rose & Crown in Walthamstow has undergone an exciting transformation and is now a theatre and events pub. I am waiting for the rest of the area to pick up, too, but that will probably be 20 years in the making...

  4. Posted by Max on 11 Sep 2009 08:09

    For the geezer looking for a pub in Leyton try the William IV up by Bakers Arms or the Birkbeck on the Stratford side of Leyton tube, for Leytonstone try the North Star tucked round the back of the Green Man roundabout.

  5. Posted by Mile ender on 08 Sep 2009 13:27

    Budgens is the bane of my existence.

  6. Posted by Elliott on 07 Sep 2009 09:00

    Bow does have a club. Purple E3 just by Mile End Station.

  7. Posted by Mauricio on 06 Sep 2009 10:22

    Well THANK YOU for finally remembering the south east! Sometimes I struggle to find any events, restaurants or even mentions to the south east in this magazine. Deptford is ok I guess but just go a bit south and you'll find places such as Brockley and Honor Oak which no many people knows of and you'll have good transport connections, good houses and prices and estaurants like Babur in the corner of Brockley Road and Ackroyd Road SE23 that will surprise you with its good food and ambience.

  8. Posted by Lindsay and Sarah on 03 Sep 2009 23:16

    Bow is up and coming because we have just moved here. All it needs is a club!

  9. Posted by Tooting resident on 02 Sep 2009 18:03

    Tooting will never be the most glamorous suburb of London, but it's a friendly enough place and has good transport links for South London. Pub-wise the Selkirk is preferable to the Trafalgar. While the Tram & Social and the Antelope are both welcome additions. For shopping, Tooting is bargain hunters central with a new Primark and TK Maxx.

  10. Posted by Tako on 28 Aug 2009 20:59

    Yasar Halim is one of the finest shops in London, period. No matter what time of day you visit the store will always have people there going for their bread and groceries. Throw in the wide choice of good eateries (especially the kebab shops) and the community vibe and it's hard not to like Haringey.

  11. Posted by Tako on 28 Aug 2009 20:56

    Malcolm - well done for the mention of the Harringey tranny - she's a tourist attraction in her own right!

  12. Posted by Elliott on 28 Aug 2009 13:57

    What about Leyton / Leytonstone. Its still a dump, but i moved here because i cant afford Bow / Hackney. I think its like Bow was 7 years ago, lots of nice Victorian terraces, but ABSOLUTELY nothing in the way of nice bars / restaurants. I think it has a lot of potential particuarly as its 10 mins to the city on the central line, and the new Westfield / Olympic village will be built on the Leyton side......

  13. Posted by Chris on 28 Aug 2009 12:32

    The Nags Head in Walthamstow also has a fine selection of beers and a beer garden. The village high street also has a decent butchers, deli and newspaper shop. Oh, a Budgens is on it's way.

  14. Posted by Jeremy Bailey on 26 Aug 2009 17:11

    Stay out of Clapton, its fine as it is! Antepliler is amazing

  15. Posted by Malcolm on 26 Aug 2009 14:50

    All this and no one's even mentioned the legendary Harringay Tranny, of Green Lanes!!! Quite an, erm, character, known by everyone.

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