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Given we?ll be socially distancing for some time, i wonder whether the council could turn north cross road into a full time market place with outdoor seating.


Priority for pitches could be given to lordship lane businesses and charities, building on the approach used for the Christmas Cracker event.

This would cause a lot of headaches for residents of North Cross Road and surrounding areas. It would mean that NCR would be closed. The only other through-road access into the area is Crystal Palace Road, but that's no right turn from East Dulwich Road. So, to get to The Actress end of NCR from Lordship Lane, it would mean either doing a U-Turn in the garage / Tescos, or taking a rat run through the back streets (Crawthew Grove, etc).
I don?t see how social distancing could work with stalls set up next to each other. As people return to work, there will be fewer potential visitors to the market during the week. There is only sufficient footfall to make the market viable in a Saturday, in the past I have seen many hopeful stalls start trading on a Friday and sadly only last a few weeks as the customers just don?t visit.

Ok , make it three days a week. It is after all already closed every Saturday. I?m sure those residents who drivE cars could cope.


On socially distancing. If the full road is closed then there?s a lot more space for socially distancing than on for example lordship lane.

And on footfall, I would imagine that if some Of the lordship lane cafes / restaurants operated Street stalls, with picnic tables, that might increase numbers of people visiting.


I guess I?m trying to think of ideas to save the local businesses. It?s not clear how many will survive without some trialling new ideas.

North Cross Road market had a 6 day a week legal arrangement but market stalls were only interested in attending on Saturdays. The market has a number of very antisocial practices and council policies - first come for best pitches so people noisily setting up at 5am or earlier.


Part of installing the electric sockets via monies Councillors allocated (it cost a lot) was to invest in the market but also to change the practices to dramatically reduce that anti scoria design. This included the market becoming Saturday only legally to coincide with the practices. This meant pitches on Fridays that were never used didn't see parking ticket being issued to residents for example.


I'k sure we would all want residents to agree and support any such changes and that a genuine demand exists.

thanks james. Yes, i suppose my point is that the context has changed quite a bit - i.e. all cafes, pubs, restaurants are takeaway only at the moment. Opening the market up with socially distanced outdoor seating might offer a route to survival for some.

millie7uk Wrote:

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> And what about the people who live in that and the

> adjoining roads, the noise, litter and traffic and

> lack of parking is a serious problem


Yes- I always walk there around the back streets and the number of cars that pass me 2 or 3 times looking for a parking spot is ridiculous...so you can add air pollution to your list

Jakido Wrote:

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> https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2020/05/16/al

> -fresco-pubs-dining-save-high-street/ Would seem

> the govt is going to encourage outdoor dining.


And in the Winter? Who is going to want to eat outside then ?

Jakido Wrote:

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> The Immediate roads are much better on a Saturday

> when the market is on, much easier to find

> somewhere to park and less traffic as no through

> roads discourage people from driving round.


You obviously know nothing about what the area was like before the Market. !!

I live very close to where the market takes place but i have never been a big fan of it. Its hard to get through the road om a saturday as its full of people simply delighted by ?9 portions of hog roast. There isnt really anything decent there to see or do, and at the Christmas Cracker thingy i actually had to call the council and complain about the noise (i had been up all night getting mashed and wanted to sleep until the afternoon). They might as well just can the thing IMO, anything there you can just buy in a shop.

KidKruger Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> DulwichFox Wrote:

> --------------------------------------------------

> -----

> > You obviously know nothing about what the area

> was

> > like before the Market. !!

>

>

> What was it like Foxy, if you know better than

> Jakido please share ?!



What was it like.. ?? How far back do want to go ??


2010..? 2000..? 1990..? 1980.. ?


I moved from Peckham to East Dulwich in 1980.. Top of Dunstans Rd. Opposite Dawson Heights.


North Cross Rd was virtually deserted at that time, although there was a Curry House Golden Tandoori

run by a guy called Farooq which was one of the very few places open on a Sunday afternoon.

His mother used to serve on tables..


Not much open on Lordship Lane at the time.


No Parking problems anywhere in East Dulwich / Dulwich.


In the evening walking down Lordship Lane after 9.00 pm you would not see many people about.

and you would not see many cars..


I moved down to Ulverscroft in 1996. I drove a Renault Master Low loader which I used for my Business

on Uplands road. A large van which I had no problems finding a parking space on my road or outside my shop.(1993)

In those days there were no parking problems in the area. You could easily park in Dulwich Park and Drive through the Park.


I changed from the van to a small Ford Escort in 1997 and parking was still relatively easy although

as Lordship Lane developed parking became harder with all the 'Tourists' to local Pubs and Restaurants increased.


BUT then the Market opened. Parking became impossible.

Having to park 2 streets away and carry shopping in 2-3 trips.


Then when a space become available racing round to recover my car only to find the space gone when I returned.

Then driving round an round till another space become available. Loads of other cars .. vans doing the same.


The market has done so much damage to the area with increase in traffic. We do not need this 7 days a week.


Nightmare.


Foxy

James Barber has already made the point that traders didn't want/ wouldn't have paid for space in, a 7 day market. Southwark did 'build a market' and nobody came (except on Saturdays). A market requires customers, with needs, and an ability to pay, coming together with suppliers who have goods and services to meet those needs, which can be supplied profitably. As it turned out, this was only true of Saturdays - and not even then to the extent that had been hoped for. A socially distanced Saturday market will be a joy to behold.

Penguin68 Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> James Barber has already made the point that

> traders didn't want/ wouldn't have paid for space

> in, a 7 day market. Southwark did 'build a market'

> and nobody came (except on Saturdays). A market

> requires customers, with needs, and an ability to

> pay, coming together with suppliers who have goods

> and services to meet those needs, which can be

> supplied profitably. As it turned out, this was

> only true of Saturdays - and not even then to the

> extent that had been hoped for. A socially

> distanced Saturday market will be a joy to behold.



There is a food market in Elephant and Castle which i believe is very popular all the time. It is ludicrously priced, a meal on a paper plate will cost at least ?12 and a pint ?6.50, which sticks in the throat somewhat when mere yards away thousands of folk are living in poverty.

I also live in Ulverscroft Road, just round the corner from the market.


I moved there nearly thirty years ago.


Obviously there have been many changes in the road/area over that time, including more large cars and more difficulty in parking due to skips, builders' vehicles etc.


However I reckon I've only had to park in another road half a dozen times. I can almost always find a parking space in the road.


For me, the benefits of having the market far outweigh the disadvantages, plus presumably it also brings additional business to the local shops in North Cross Road and Lordship Lane.

Unless a vaccine miraculously appears, we are going to have distancing rules for at least a year. That means more home working etc. so people around during the week. Any argument about what people/traders did/didn't want years in the past ignores the fact that reality is rather different now and for the near future. A lot of people commenting seem stuck in the past.


Good on jakido for coming up with a brilliant idea to help people and local businesses in these difficult times. 3 days a week would be great with some outside tables. We need to experiment to find out what works.

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