The City and East

All eyes have gazed on the dynamic east in the last few years, with the self-consciously cool, arty camp gravitating towards Shoreditch, Hoxton and Hackney, and ever more stratospheric skyscrapers being built in Canary Wharf.

London's eastern promise begins in Clerkenwell, where abandoned warehouses, old French Huguenot residences and ex-watchmakers' workshops have been converted into loft accommodation, photographic studios, media offices, style bars, gastropubs and night clubs. Just south is Fleet Street, forever the namesake of British journalism, and although all the papers have now dispersed, some of the original buildings and legendary pubs frequented by legendary hacks still remain. Just east, the City of London contains the 'square mile' of London's financial quarter. During the week, it's eyes down, full throttle in hive-like endeavour where the Stock Exchange is the queen bee; by the weekend, it's a ghost town. Alongside the City's contemporary architecture (famously, the Gherkin and Lloyds of London, pictured right) are some of the oldest parts of London – scores of 17th-century Wren-designed churches (including St Paul's Cathedral), the medieval Tower of London and relics of Roman walls.

Hoxton and its neighbours Shoreditch and Hackney are collectively London's HQ of cool (at least its residents smugly claim as much, with their experimental haircuts and clashing thrift chic). In the early 1990s, it was a wasteland of disused industrial structures and rundown council estates. Impoverished artists moved in, bringing with them cachet and counterculture, and other creatives soon followed (notably the dot-com entrepreneurs). Cheap rents also lured an influx of immigrants – Bangladeshis populate Brick Lane (now famed for its curry houses); the Vietnamese settled around Kingsland Road and Afro-Caribbeans in Hackney. Then came gentrification and the chains, yet more chains, and the bridge and tunnellers – on a Saturday night it can feel more like Leicester Square. As money continues to pour into East End night culture, with private members' clubs and glossy, over-designed bars, the avant garde marches on to ever more remote sites of graffiti-ed, gritty urbanity – Dalston, Stoke Newington and Hackney Marshes. Meanwhile, the artistic community has come of age, attracting bankers with bonuses to blow at the burgeoning commercial art gallery scene of Hackney's Vyner Street and Herald Street. The East's crown of cool endures, albeit now ripe for parody with all those tragic try-hards. But the real tragedy is that the original working-class East Enders – or Cockneys, born within earshot of Bow Bells – have been displaced by soaring property prices paid for by middle-class 'Mockneys'. To that, they probably retort, 'What a load of pony and trap.'

Further east is the City's younger brother, Canary Wharf (beyond this map) – a recent financial development built on old docklands that includes three of London's tallest buildings: the totemic office blocks of One Canada Square, and HSBC and Citigroup Towers. The entire area is designed with one thing in mind – maximizing profits, minimizing distraction – so there's not much to see. Just next door is the infamous Millennium Dome, the Labour Party's colossal white elephant, which is now a concert venue, The O2 Arena, while further east is Greenwich and the chance to walk the line of longitude that marks GMT (evidence that London really is centre of the universe). Greenwich is also London's maritime zone and home to the Old Royal Naval College and the famous 19th-century tea clipper, the Cutty Sark. And with the preparations for the London Olympics to be held in Stratford (just east of Hackney) in 2012, there's yet more urban regeneration, human traffic and focus to come to East London.


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