Damian Barr
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Herne Hill Culture Code: Between eternally-edgy Brixton and
ever-so-civilised Dulwich, Herne Hill has a vibe all of its own
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Herne Hill Body Code: Fancy seeing a future Olympic champion? Of is boxing
more your thing? Then check out this edition
EVERYONE knows someone who lives in Herne Hill. You go there, see friends,
have a lovely time and come home feeling slightly envious and obscurely
resentful. Then you realise that SE24 isn’t a location – it’s a lifestyle.
And suddenly you want to live it.
Objectors to Herne Hill (there are some) complain that, like most of South
London, it has no Tube. So what? Neither does Stoke Newington or Crouch End
and both are popular (for different reasons). Herne Hill is a combination of
the two. It’s got Crouch family-friendliness and Stokey style. And it’s only
ten mainline minutes from Victoria.
I fall straight from the station into Pullen’s café. Here I meet Stella Duffy,
a long-time local and one of several writers who come here to crank out
stories between coffees.
“South London has always had a rough reputation,” says Duffy, who shares her
Victorian terrace house with Shelley Silas, also a writer. “We tried North
London but found it suffocating. We both work from home, so we needed a big
space. Here we have parks and air and space and, yes, the odd shooting.”
Duffy, most famous for her crime novels, finds this inspiring rather than
intimidating.
“This bit of London is surprisingly unwritten, and there’s so much to write
about. So many different cultures and classes call Herne Hill home.” They
certainly do. Sandwiched between urban Brixton and urbane Dulwich, Herne
Hill is surprisingly large. It runs down Railton Road (front line in the
1981 Brixton riots), along Half Moon Lane out to Brockwell Park, and up to
Ruskin Park.
When I wrote about Herne Hill three years ago, I mentioned a tenth-floor
former council flat for sale at £99,950. It sold that day. Now it would
fetch four times that. Not that anyone with views across Brockwell Park and
out to Crystal Palace would sell. A friend lives right across the road in a
cleverly converted basement. He, too, bought for five figures and could sell
for £250,000plus. Walk to the Poet’s Corner area and watch prices take a
hike. Visit the coveted North Dulwich Triangle and watch your whole salary
vanish.
“We took a punt on Herne Hill and it’s paid off,” says Duffy. “But we’re not
in it for the money – it’s about community.” A local newsagent advertises
breast-feeding groups, guerrilla gardening and children’s yoga.
Brockwell Park is everyone’s back garden. Barbecue smoke curls into the trees.
Walkers of dogs and buggy-pushers trot along and t’ai-chi types tie
themselves in knots. The lido in the park hosts pool parties and film
screenings; try not to shiver and it could be LA. For picnic fare visit the
Blackbird Bakery. Before you know it, you’re one of those people that lives
in Herne Hill. And your friends are jealous of you.
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Herne Hill is the Primrose Hill of S. London.
Caroline, London,
Strange how not having a tube station around put's people off living in an area well supplied with train stations that do the same thing. Perhaps it's the decor? Only the English.
Paul McCloskey, London, UK
There is alot wrong with south London not least the lax policing that allows open drug dealing in public places..I was horrified to witness this at a crowded bus stop in Brixton. My daughter informs me it is common practice. At least one of the youths in question had the grace to look at me and apologise.
I feel desperately sorry for these young men who are struggling to grow in an environment that turns a blind eye to evil.
Hala McKee, Scunthorpe, North Lincolnshire
25 years on why does Brixton still continue to be mentioned alongside riots?? Time to move on from this stigma.
Ben, East Dulwich, London,
Stella and I did indeed have a long and lovely talk. Edited, as ever.
I have no idea what class she would claim to be part of (is creative a class?). I am not sure about her feelings regarding picnics--though she clearly loves parks. I do know she's far from smug. And that she loves her code--the good, the bad and the occasionally dodgy.
damian barr, London,
sadly the actual discussion was a much longer and richer one about the non-local-public and media perception of Brixton as 'dangerous' and my own, long-term experience of it as a vibrant, thriving community. hence the inspiration. and the lack of intimidation. unfortunately there's no accounting for editing.
not picnicking either.
Stella Duffy, London
Stella Duffy, London, UK
Having moved from Neuvelle Croix to Winchester three years ago, there is precious little I miss about the grubby streets of South London despite being born and bred there. But I do miss Brockwell Lido; eccentric, laid-back, friendly. The only place to be at 7.30am with your baby after a hot, sticky London night.
Rachel, Winchester,
when writers are 'inspired rather than intimdated' by shootings in south london, which (as they know well) are about a hundred times more likely to take place not amongst smug, picnic eating middle classes, but the estate-dwelling non-white residents of this hugely desirable postcode, isn't that quite sickening? Like, as long as it doesn't affect them it's cool that people are shooting each other?
bob, edinburgh, Scotland