Why some streets in London stay resolutely thesame
為何倫敦仍執拗地保持部分街道不變樣
KENTISH TOWN ROAD is a humdrum high street innorth London. It contains pawnbrokers, pound shops, hairdressers and some long-in-the-tooth hardware stores. Unlike Camden Town to the south, full of bars and tattoo parlours, orHampstead to the west, with its bistros and boutique clothing shops, little seems to havechanged on the street for the past three decades. “It's never quite got going,” admits GaryMcLaren, a local bookseller. Yet the lack of change is odd—and hints at some of the strangenessof London.
肯特鎮路(KENTISH TOWN ROAD)是倫敦北部的一條頗顯乏味的街道。這這條街上有當鋪、一磅店(像中國的一元店)、理發店和一些古老的五金店。不似南部盡是酒吧和紋身店的卡登姆鎮和西部滿是夜總會與精品服飾店的漢普斯蒂德,30年來肯特鎮路似乎并無改變。當地的一位書店老板Gary McLaren 坦誠,“它從未真正改變。”但是欠缺改變是如此之怪異—而且這暗示了倫敦的些許陌生感。
Kentish Town has excellent transport links to central London, and plenty of residents preparedto pay good money for that. Off the high street stretch rows of pretty Victorian terracedhouses, which sell for as much as 2m ($3m) apiece. Between 2007 and 2014 property prices inthe postcode area surrounding the main Tube and railway station more than doubled. An influxof French parents, drawn by a school that opened in 2011, is pushing prices even higher. YetKentish Town's shops and cafes are almost invariably untrendy and in some cases mouldering.A hair salon, a butcher and a sportswear shop have each been owned by the same men formore than a quarter of a century. Why?
One explanation is that, in common with other parts of London, Kentish Town has lots ofsocial housing as well as costly Victorian terraces. Camden Council, the local authority, isbuilding even more in the borough. This helps cheaper shops survive, suggests Tony Traversof the London School of Economics: council tenants are less likely to drive and so rely more onlocal outlets. And the sheer volume of car and lorry traffic on the busy high street, which is amain road into the city, might deter shoppers from visiting and swanky businesses fromsetting up in the area.
Demography plays a part, too. Fully 72% of the population of Kentish Town is white, includinga good number of Irish residents—higher than the proportion in London as a whole, at 60%.Unlike the high streets around Peckham and Brixton in south London, which cater for Africanshoppers who may travel far to reach them, few specialist shops draw people to Kentish Town. “We're not a destination high street,” sighs one local trader.
NIMBYs have not always helped. Lots of civic groups are active in the area, campaigning againstlate licences and the like, says Dan Carrier of the Camden New Journal, a newspaper. A localbusiness association is also good at complaining. Partly because of this, a big supermarket hasnot yet opened on the high street—though Lidl, a discounter, will set up shop this year. “Wequite like that it is rough around the edges,” says Michael Williams, a writer and local.
鄰避效應(not in my back yard,指居民或當地單位因擔心建設項目帶來諸多負面影響,從而激發人們的嫌惡情結,滋生“不要建在我家后院”的心理,及采取的強烈和堅決的、有時高度情緒化的集體反對甚至抗爭行為。)并不一直都起作用。該地區的許多公民組織是很活躍的,他們常反對老舊的許可證這類事物,來自卡姆登新日報(Camden New Journal)的Dan Carrier說道。當地的一個工商協會也很擅長這種控訴。在一定程度上出于這種原因,一家大型超市都未能在這條街上開張—即使是將在今年開業Lidl(一間德國的連鎖超級市場,在全球擁有超過8000間分店。)當地作家Michael Williams說,“我們的確喜歡在邊緣徘徊,不入大流。”
Paradoxically, soaring house prices in the area might be another brake on change. Wealthyfamily buyers mean that some houses once split into flats have been turned back into homes,says Mr Carrier. The result is fewer shoppers on the high street. Wealthy residents are morelikely to get their groceries online or drive to bigger stores. And most will go out to the WestEnd rather than a local restaurant.
相反的是,該地區飛漲的房價可能是改變的另一個阻礙。Carrier表示,那些富裕家庭的買主意味著曾被隔成公寓的房屋已被變回原來的大房子。結果便是街道上越來越少的顧客。富裕的居民更可能在線購物或是開車去大商店。而且其中的大多數人會去倫敦西區(the West End)而不是當地的餐廳。
Such “counter-currents” will prevent Kentish Town from gentrifying fully, suggests GillianTindall, a local historian. And they affect many other streets in London, too. Lupus Street inPimlico serves a large council block on one side and white stucco houses on the other.Caledonian Road in Islington, close to rapidly-changing King's Cross, is still full of kebab shops.London is a global city, but it is also a collection of villages, cranky and resistant to change.