SianBerry

Sian Berry

Anti-4WD campaigner and Green Party candidate for Mayor of London, Sian Berry writes for newstatesman.com

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Camden's burning

  • Posted by Sian Berry
  • 11 February 2008

It’s Sunday and I’ve just been through Camden Town, on my way back home to Kentish Town from the Chinese New Year celebrations in Trafalgar Square and Chinatown. As I changed buses, I saw first-hand the massive amount of damage done to the canalside market by last night’s fire.

The destruction is extensive, and the danger from the damaged buildings so great that all the markets have been closed for the day. The police cordon extends most of the way down the roads leading away from the scene. As I walked over the canal to catch my bus home, I could see fire crews on cranes still pouring water over the gutted shops and market stalls, more than 18 hours after the fire started.

It was so sad to see one of my favourite parts of Camden in such a state. I have been talking up the excellence of its markets a lot lately, seeing as one of the standard Mayoral interview questions seems to be, ‘Where do you shop for clothes?’ (I do hope all the other candidates are getting that one). But of course it’s not just good for racks of second-hand bargain jackets; Camden’s markets support a wide range of entrepreneurs, artisans and craftspeople – unique small businesses that must all be suffering today.

It was a reminder, too, that we have to cherish the individuality of London’s various ‘urban villages’ - whether Camden Town or Chinatown - and support them, not take them for granted. The London Chinatown Chinese Association are doing a great job maintaining the spirit and character of their area, as shown by their tremendous work organising today’s celebrations. The stallholders and small business owners in Camden are similarly united as they find themselves under pressure from circling developers. I have joined them more than once in recent years to object to the encroachment of shiny new shopping centres into the area.

This latest blow is a challenge for all of to make sure the damaged buildings are restored for the benefit of the existing businesses and householders, and that this disaster is not used as an excuse for another characterless mall to spring up in their place.

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2 comments from readers

Carl Jones
12 February 2008 at 20:14

Sian, the fire was an inside job and the site will be redeveloped....what will you do to stop it? I suspect the next target will be Battersea Power Station.LOL

DCarins
14 February 2008 at 19:01

"Regeneration" just means property development in the UK.

It's easy to revile property development as being characterless and "shiny" - but those developments create profits for the construction companies, suppliers of materials and minerals, banks, IT companies, engineers, utility companies, energy providers.... in other words, companies which you probably have shares in via your pension fund, insurance company and bank account.

Judging by the number of people who shop at Tesco and ASDA, it's safe to assume the majority of British people have no morals or principles, so it's safe to say most British people would work for and buy from the shiny, characterless mall that will inevitably replace Camden Market. In other words, the developers are responding to market forces - the profit from developing farmers markets, small units for independent retailers, shared spaces for co-operatives etc is too small (because people don't use them) to make it worth while to buy the land, demolish and remediate the site, design, market and then build the new development and then make your 20% profit on top.

The problem is social and economic, and policy can do very little to change this in a short space of time. Cultural shifts are of course possible (Thatcherism, anyone?), but that will take radical change driven by extreme events to make people alter their behaviour to become more aware of ethical, environmental and social considerations beyond selfish and immediate concerns.

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Sian Berry

Green Party candidate for Mayor of London, Sian Berry lives in Kentish Town. She is 33 and has previously been principal speaker and campaigns co-ordinator for the Greens. She also works as a writer and is a founder of the Alliance Against Urban 4x4s.

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