Notting Hill and West

There's a particular breed of West Londoners – posh, conservative (and Conservative) and English – whose reputation prevails over the entire area, so much so that the expression 'that's so West London' (often used by the more hip, possibly chippy, Hoxtonites) has come to describe a look that is pretty, safe and moneyed. The heartbeat of this bourgeoisie radiates from Notting Hill, where stuccoed mansions provide the kind of comfort to which these Londoners are accustomed. In truth there are other power tribes in Notting Hill: in the 1950s, West Indian immigrants took root here and local Caribbean culture continues to be a proud part of street life. The annual Notting Hill Carnival in August – started in the 1960s to promote harmony between the immigrant communities and the English majority – is still Caribbean in flavour, with steel drum bands and exotically dressed dancers on floats. The privileged throw parties on their decked terraces overlooking the riffraff – rather less integrationist but, frankly, London's biggest street party needs all the space it can get.

In the 1960s Notting Hill was a haven for bohemians and many still live here, now with their grown-up posh-hippy offspring. Other settlers – from Morocco, Spain, Portugal and Greece – have added a welcome Mediterranean flavour with vibrant bistros and colourful food markets, but in many ways Notting Hill remains awfully English – hence a good location for a Hollywood romcom about a Hollywood star who falls in love with an archetypal bumbling British chap (Hugh Grant, who else?). And the film? Notting Hill, of course. That location manager had a gift of a job – Notting Hill's middle-class bohemia makes for a perfectly picturesque set thanks to the romance of Portobello Road, a cute, characterful lane lined with candy-coloured cottages, and buzzing with antiques shops and its famous street market. Just west (beyond this map), Holland Park is a grown-up, more affluent version of Notting Hill, minus the ethnic diversity. The steady encroachment of bland-tasted bankers into both areas has seen the high-end global brands move in, and individuality increasingly driven out.
Further west, the BBC's TV studios take out a large proportion of Shepherd's Bush; the rest a home for Polish, East African and West Indian communities (and lots of Brits). Its neighbour, Hammersmith, is right on the river with historic pubs aplenty; both are a mix of expensive townhouses and sorry social housing.

Plenty of other ethnic enclaves characterize West London – Bayswater's hookah cafés and shwarma shops service a lively Lebanese, Egyptian and Algerian community; St John's Wood is a wealthy Jewish district (also home to EMI's Abbey Road recording studio and that famous zebra crossing, hence a place of pilgrimage for Beatles fans), while Earl's Court has become a refuge for backpacking antipodeans, and Kilburn for the Irish.

West London also has a rich royal legacy – Britain's kings and queens have historically looked west for their parks and palaces. Hyde Park, acquired by Henry VIII as a hunting ground, spreads westwards from Marble Arch to Kensington. At the west end of Hyde Park is Kensington Palace, once home to the Prince and Princess of Wales (Charles moved to St James's after his divorce from Diana); further out is Hampton Court, Henry VIII's Tudor palace on the Thames, and Richmond Park, London's largest open space with 2,350 acres, and a royal park since the 13th century. Windsor Castle, the Queen's weekend retreat, is 20 miles west in the Berkshire countryside. No wonder the posh chose this royal corridor to take up residence.


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