Jump to content

Recommended Posts

I live close to there and am considering acoustic glazing due to both the plane and vehicle noise. I've already had a quote for secondary glazing. I am a very light sleeper though! 

I've walked back home at night from there but prefer to take routes that are better lit when it's dark and not many people are about.

You can check crime levels by postcode here:

https://www.met.police.uk/area/your-area/ 

  • Thanks 1

The road is quite wide in parts, and is leafy, but with cars parked up on both sides (but not continuously) and wider than many, with buses and lorries going up and down it - it is one of the few links now to the South circular - and with two lanes of traffic you do need at times to drive with some caution and to hold back to let oncoming traffic pass. But it is much wider, in the main, than the side streets. Cars now are themselves wider than they used to be.

2 hours ago, FH2016 said:

Is that safe to walk around at night, are there lots of burglaries/car thefts etc?

Yes, in the main (and I've lived there for nearly 40 years). There are burglaries and car thefts, of course, it's suburban London, after all, but not significantly many. Because that part of the road is quite wide, and not very parked up unless someone is having a party (not that frequent an occurrence) , so there aren't so many places for lurkers to hide.

2 hours ago, alice said:

The road isn’t wide?  I thought you said it was a leafy Boulevard.

Not helpful.  The area is by the cemetery where it is a little narrower but the issue here is that it is on a hill, which encourages some to speed down the hill.

  • Confused 1
18 minutes ago, malumbu said:

Not helpful.  The area is by the cemetery where it is a little narrower but the issue here is that it is on a hill, which encourages some to speed down the hill.

I've been on P13s at night speeding along Underhill Road where I was so concerned for my safety I nearly got off the bus.

  • Haha 1
1 hour ago, sunshine_m said:

I live close to there and am considering acoustic glazing due to both the plane and vehicle noise. I've already had a quote for secondary glazing. I am a very light sleeper though! 

I've walked back home at night from there but prefer to take routes that are better lit when it's dark and not many people are about.

You can check crime levels by postcode here:

https://www.met.police.uk/area/your-area/ 

I think probably any area round here will get the plane noise.

I'm not sure any level of glazing will entirely shut it out.

I have acoustic glass in my bedroom which I was told was what was used in Heathrow offices, but I can still hear planes through it, albeit faintly.

That wasn't why I got it though. I was constantly being woken by my neighbours' boiler going on and off all through the  night. I think there was something wrong with it. It doesn't happen any more.

As regards coming home at night, as with anywhere in London (or indeed most places, I guess!), it's preferable to stick to well lit roads with a few people around, where possible.

Edited by Sue
  • Thanks 1
1 hour ago, sunshine_m said:

@Sue Good to know acoustic glazing makes a difference!

Funnily enough, I was just lying in bed and hearing a really loud plane.

I couldn't think what was wrong, until I realised I had the window open!

When I closed the window, I really noticed a massive difference!

There's a thread on Heathrow noise.  It depends on how sensitive you are, sleeping patterns and the like.  It doesn't wake me up now but many years ago when I was stressed at work I'd listen to the red eye flights coming into land from the Atlantic from around 5.30.

This conversation about aircraft nose is not Underhill Rd specific, please note, but reflects experiences across ED. In fact one thing which was, sort of, Underhill area specific was the glorious sight of Concord flying over at 6.00pm every evening. It was noisy, certainly (not excessively so, in my view, or rather hearing) but magnificent!

I have never been worried by aircraft noise, by the way, after nearly 40 years, or even really aware of it save when reading this sort of topic. Responses seem to be very personal. Some, clearly, are deeply upset about it. For those, some speak highly of noise cancelling headphones as a remedy, or at least alleviation.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Try going to their  West Dulwich branch - certainly not cheap either but bear in mind that this does fund one hopes, or my understanding the hospice..  Charity Shops use to get reduced rent - no idea if this is still the case. if you want bargains then go to Bromley High Street - plenty of charity hops there and once in a while BHF have a week  long promotion where literally everything in shop is £1.00.     
    • Please write to your MP via WriteToThem about this. It will let her know that there are still problems. 
    • Do they pay rent? Volunteers generally staff these places bar the manager. It's amazing how 99% of charity shops manage to exist. I mean the ones that shift the same donated brand for under £10.    They were covered in gold, diamonds and made especially for a lucky bargain hunter willing to pay near full price for secondhand goods. I mean vintage, up cycled  retro etc etc. 
    • This conversation about aircraft nose is not Underhill Rd specific, please note, but reflects experiences across ED. In fact one thing which was, sort of, Underhill area specific was the glorious sight of Concord flying over at 6.00pm every evening. It was noisy, certainly (not excessively so, in my view, or rather hearing) but magnificent! I have never been worried by aircraft noise, by the way, after nearly 40 years, or even really aware of it save when reading this sort of topic. Responses seem to be very personal. Some, clearly, are deeply upset about it. For those, some speak highly of noise cancelling headphones as a remedy, or at least alleviation.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...