Chelsea and South

Kensington, Chelsea and Fulham remain the territory of the Sloane, that upper-middle-class horsey type identified in the 1980s and named after one of their favourite haunts, Sloane Square. Extending from Sloane Square is the King's Road where the Swinging Sixties – and Mick Jagger, Twiggy and Mary Quant – once swung, and where punks roamed in the 1970s, lured by Vivienne Westwood and Malcolm McLaren's emporium called (for controversy's sake) SEX. These days, the youthquake has passed and the scene is rather more Chelsea Pensioners (those scarlet-uniformed war veterans who retire to the Chelsea Royal Hospital) and Sloanes (not dissimilar to their 1980s counterparts, if now more posh-chav in appearance – stripey blonde hair and lots of slap) who can afford to live in the area's beautiful townhouses.

Some of Britain's most expensive real estate is in nearby Belgravia – grand, stuccoed houses all painted cream gloss, many inhabited by international embassies. Next door, Knightsbridge – certainly no knockdown neighbourhood, having at the time of going to press claimed the world record at £6,000 per square foot – is home to Harrods, the designer boutiques of Sloane Street, and affluent Arabs. Just west is South Kensington, also posh and pricey but with the added gravitas of 'Albertopolis', a loose campus of national museums and colleges commissioned by Prince Albert in the 1850s.

Most of South London lies south of the river (beyond the map). Known as 'Saarf London' because of its working-class majority, it's arguably the underdog in terms of wealth and status. Fans maintain that inhabitants are salt-of-the-earth, hard-working types and not the bourgeois snobs of the north (NB: petty north–south rivalry endures). Critics – usually North Londoners – say it's an ugly, unsafe suburban sprawl with terrible transport links. In reality, it's this and more – its lag stems from pre-bridge medieval times when North London was developed and South London languished – few historic monuments were built here. However, the South Bank is London's most important contemporary culture centre, and is lined with galleries, concert halls and theatres.

Just beyond the riverbank, Waterloo, Southwark, Borough and Bermondsey have all seen recent gentrification of old industrial-age factories. Further south, Elephant and Castle, Vauxhall and New Cross (an area that includes Old Kent Road, Monopoly's cheapest street) are more 'earthy', with gloomy tower blocks and grim shopping centres. Some delight in these last bastions of pre-gentrification – New Cross, the scene of the latest youthquake, is being hailed as South London's Shoreditch; non-believers call it all plain inner-city decay. Upstream are Battersea and Clapham, residential neighbourhoods with plenty of lively hangouts to service its young (and conventional) graduate community. With Battersea Park (and its boating lake, zoo and river views) and Clapham Common (with its summer concerts), the quality of life is good and the reason why many good-time South Africans and Australians settle here.

Brixton, Camberwell and Peckham are the antidote to the safe, squeaky grad scene. Here you will find Jamaican communities in Brixton, West Africans in Peckham, and a mixture in Camberwell; these areas are also popular with the liberal, middle-class and politically correct social-worker cliche who wants to unite with their brothers and sisters, preferably in a communal squat over a Camberwell Carrot (a fat spliff). Music is instrumental to the area, especially Brixton, whose black- and dance-music scenes attract both diehard and try-hard clubbers. Brixton is not all so mellow, however – the area is charged with attitude, and an increasing Yardie presence, a high incidence of gun, drug and street crime, and a history of race riots lend a tough edge. Camberwell and Peckham, with the nearby Camberwell College of Arts, share a more easy-going, artistic feel, though all – run-down and rough yet dynamic and diverse – provoke extreme reactions either way. Rather like the north–south divide in fact.


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