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[[Arcola Theatre]] in Ashwin Street produces some fringe theatre and is a centre for a number of theatre-related community activities such as its theatre writers' programme, youth theatre and over-sixties drama.
[[Arcola Theatre]] in Ashwin Street produces some fringe theatre and is a centre for a number of theatre-related community activities such as its theatre writers' programme, youth theatre and over-sixties drama.


Dalston was a hub for 1970s and 1980s pub rock venues but these are largely defunct. However the new Dalston Culture House, the first wing of which has opened on Gillett Square, hosts the [[Vortex Jazz Club]], recently{{when|date=July 2011}} moved from [[Stoke Newington]].
Dalston was a hub for 1970s and 1980s [[English]] pub rock venues but these are largely defunct. However the new Dalston Culture House, the first wing of which has opened on Gillett Square, hosts the [[Vortex Jazz Club]], recently{{when|date=July 2011}} moved from [[Stoke Newington]].


Centerprise is a long-established BME community bookshop where regular events take place in the coffee bar. [[Fassett Square]] in Dalston was the inspiration for the fictional location of the [[BBC]] [[soap opera]] ''[[EastEnders]]'', ''Albert Square''.
Centerprise is a long-established BME community bookshop where regular events take place in the coffee bar. [[Fassett Square]] in Dalston was the inspiration for the fictional location of the [[BBC]] [[soap opera]] ''[[EastEnders]]'', ''Albert Square''.
Line 78: Line 78:
Contemporary Dalston is a lively neighbourhood with an ethnically varied population. Architecturally it is a mixture of 18th and 19th century [[terraced house]]s and 20th century [[council estate]]s. It is currently undergoing rapid [[gentrification]], partly because of the construction of a new [[railway station]] at [[Dalston Junction railway station|Dalston Junction]], part of the extension of the [[East London Line]] completed in 2010 and partly due to the revitalisation of large parts of east London in the build-up to the [[2012 Olympics]] ([[London Borough of Hackney|Hackney]] is one of the four host [[borough]]s of the [[2012 Olympics|Games]]).
Contemporary Dalston is a lively neighbourhood with an ethnically varied population. Architecturally it is a mixture of 18th and 19th century [[terraced house]]s and 20th century [[council estate]]s. It is currently undergoing rapid [[gentrification]], partly because of the construction of a new [[railway station]] at [[Dalston Junction railway station|Dalston Junction]], part of the extension of the [[East London Line]] completed in 2010 and partly due to the revitalisation of large parts of east London in the build-up to the [[2012 Olympics]] ([[London Borough of Hackney|Hackney]] is one of the four host [[borough]]s of the [[2012 Olympics|Games]]).


Dalston has attracted new immigrants to the UK for over one hundred years; at the turn of the century it was a popular Jewish area for the newly arrived from central Europe. In the fifties and sixties, as the Jewish community became more affluent, they were replaced by a large Caribbean community in Dalston, which is reflected by the wide choice of Caribbean foods available in Ridley Road. As the Caribbean community slowly drifted out of Dalston it then became popular with the Turkish, as well as the Vietnamese. Recent émigrés to the community are the Polish community judging by the numbers of Polish delicatessens now appearing and other stores catering to Polish tastes.
Dalston has been a center of English working-class and lower-middle class families for hundreds of years. Although it remains predominently British, it has for the last century had large minority populations first starting with [[Irish Catholics]] in the middle 19th century, and then [[Jews]] who arrived here and bought houses from most of the Irish Catholic families. For the next two generations it attracted new Jewish immigrants. In the fifties and sixties, as the Jewish community became more affluent, they encouraged the importation of a large Caribbean community in Dalston, which they rented their homes too. However, many of these homes were subsequently divided and were accused of being run by slum-lords. Subsequently, zoning regulations were enforced and many Afro-Caribean families moved elsewhere. However, starting in the 80's it became with a new wave of Turkish and Vietnamese immigrants. Since the late 90's recent émigrés to the community are the Polish community judging by the numbers of Polish delicatessens now appearing and other stores catering to Polish tastes.


[[Fassett Square]] was the inspiration for the BBC Soap ''[[EastEnders]]''. Originally, there were plans to film the series there, on location. However, Fassett Square ([[Albert Square]]) and Ridley Road Market (Walford Market) were rebuilt on the set in Elstree, Borehamwood to have a more controlled filming environment. The origin of the area of Walford was from Walford Road and many of the houses on the show use the same exterior design. Both [[Barbara Windsor]] and [[Tony Holland]], one of the original creators of the show, lived at different times on the street.
[[Fassett Square]] was the inspiration for the BBC Soap ''[[EastEnders]]''. Originally, there were plans to film the series there, on location. However, Fassett Square ([[Albert Square]]) and Ridley Road Market (Walford Market) were rebuilt on the set in Elstree, Borehamwood to have a more controlled filming environment. The origin of the area of Walford was from Walford Road and many of the houses on the show use the same exterior design. Both [[Barbara Windsor]] and [[Tony Holland]], one of the original creators of the show, lived at different times on the street.

Revision as of 21:09, 13 August 2011

Dalston
OS grid referenceTQ345845
• Charing Cross4 mi (6.4 km) SW
London borough
Ceremonial countyGreater London
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townLONDON
Postcode districtE8
Dialling code020
PoliceMetropolitan
FireLondon
AmbulanceLondon
UK Parliament
London Assembly
List of places
UK
England
London

Dalston is a district of east London, England, located in the London Borough of Hackney. It is situated 4 miles (6.4 km) northeast of Charing Cross. The area is identified in the London Plan as one of 35 major centres in Greater London.[1] Its historical borders are Kingsland Road and Kingsland High Street in the west, London Fields in the east, Downs Park Road in the north and the Shoreditch parish boundary in the south. Its main shopping street, Kingsland High Street, follows the route of the Roman Ermine Street, and has the road number A10. Modern Dalston is often seen as the area surrounding both sides of Kingsland High Street, even though some of the west side is within the London Borough of Islington.

History

The name Dalston is thought to have derived from Deorlaf’s tun (farm)[2] in much the same way as nearby Hoxton was named after the farm of ‘Hoch’.

The village was one of four small villages within the Parish of Hackney (along with Newington, Shacklewell, and Kingsland) that were grouped for assessment purposes, together having only as many houses as the village of Hackney.

John Rocque's map of circa 1746 shows the village of Kingsland centred around the crossroads at Dalston Junction and the small village of Dalston further east along Dalston Lane.

Around AD 1280 a leper hospital was founded in Dalston by the citizens of London and in AD 1549 it was attached to the chapel of St Bartholomew as an outhouse.

During the 18th and 19th Centuries the area changed from an agricultural and rural landscape to urban one. By 1849, it was described as a recently increased suburban village, with some handsome old houses, and by 1859 the village had exceeded its neighbour and with the railways and continuous building, the village of Kingsland disappeared.[3]

Redevelopment and future

The gentrification of the area has led to a rapid increase in the price of property. The process of change has been accelerated since the East London line extension (to be renamed the East London Railway on completion) and since the reopening of Dalston Junction Station was confirmed in the run-up to London's successful bid to hold the 2012 Olympics.

Entertainment

The Dalston Culture House now houses the Vortex Jazz Club. (October 2005)

Dalston has always been an important transport and shopping centre. It was also, at one time, an important entertainment centre, with four or five cinemas within a radius of half a kilometre, and the Dalston Theatre, a former hippodrome and music hall that later became the Four Aces blues club and the Labyrinth nightclub. The Dalston Theatre was demolished in February 2007, despite an active local campaign to save it.[4]

The Dalston Rio. One of the few cinemas left in east London. (October 2005)

The last survivor of Dalston's 20th-century entertainment boom is the Rio Cinema, one of the very few cinemas left in East London and, indeed, one of the few independent cinemas left in London. Besides its regular programmes of popular and art movies, the Rio also features film festivals and children's matinees.

Arcola Theatre in Ashwin Street produces some fringe theatre and is a centre for a number of theatre-related community activities such as its theatre writers' programme, youth theatre and over-sixties drama.

Dalston was a hub for 1970s and 1980s English pub rock venues but these are largely defunct. However the new Dalston Culture House, the first wing of which has opened on Gillett Square, hosts the Vortex Jazz Club, recently[when?] moved from Stoke Newington.

Centerprise is a long-established BME community bookshop where regular events take place in the coffee bar. Fassett Square in Dalston was the inspiration for the fictional location of the BBC soap opera EastEnders, Albert Square.

Notable residents

Shopping

Dalston's Ridley Road market, October 2005.

Dalston is not a glamorous shopping centre but it has become legendary in northeast London, mostly thanks to its excellent Ridley Road street market. The keyphrase here is 'value for money' and for food shopping it is hard to better this area. Fruit and vegetables, some fairly exotic, are available at low prices, and the local halal butchers, clustered around the high street end of the market, are hard to beat in terms of price. Ridley Road market is reputedly the basis for the one found in BBC's EastEnders. The Kingsland Shopping Centre mall (formerly Dalston Cross) is a useful, if drab, supplement to the main market street. It has recently[when?] been extended to house a Matalan budget clothes store over the car park.

The ancient shopping street of Broadway Market, to the South East of the district, boasts a wide selection of 'up and coming' boutiques, pubs and cafes. Thanks to these, and the successful Saturday Farmer's Market, this area immediately adjacent to London Fields is regarded as thriving.

Area profile

Dalston, looking south towards The City. A major traffic nexus, but not always quite so clogged up—temporary roadworks are underway here. (October 2005)

Contemporary Dalston is a lively neighbourhood with an ethnically varied population. Architecturally it is a mixture of 18th and 19th century terraced houses and 20th century council estates. It is currently undergoing rapid gentrification, partly because of the construction of a new railway station at Dalston Junction, part of the extension of the East London Line completed in 2010 and partly due to the revitalisation of large parts of east London in the build-up to the 2012 Olympics (Hackney is one of the four host boroughs of the Games).

Dalston has been a center of English working-class and lower-middle class families for hundreds of years. Although it remains predominently British, it has for the last century had large minority populations first starting with Irish Catholics in the middle 19th century, and then Jews who arrived here and bought houses from most of the Irish Catholic families. For the next two generations it attracted new Jewish immigrants. In the fifties and sixties, as the Jewish community became more affluent, they encouraged the importation of a large Caribbean community in Dalston, which they rented their homes too. However, many of these homes were subsequently divided and were accused of being run by slum-lords. Subsequently, zoning regulations were enforced and many Afro-Caribean families moved elsewhere. However, starting in the 80's it became with a new wave of Turkish and Vietnamese immigrants. Since the late 90's recent émigrés to the community are the Polish community judging by the numbers of Polish delicatessens now appearing and other stores catering to Polish tastes.

Fassett Square was the inspiration for the BBC Soap EastEnders. Originally, there were plans to film the series there, on location. However, Fassett Square (Albert Square) and Ridley Road Market (Walford Market) were rebuilt on the set in Elstree, Borehamwood to have a more controlled filming environment. The origin of the area of Walford was from Walford Road and many of the houses on the show use the same exterior design. Both Barbara Windsor and Tony Holland, one of the original creators of the show, lived at different times on the street.

That is not the only connection with entertainment industry. Around the corner, music hall artiste Marie Lloyd (1870–1922) used to reside on Graham Road. The house now has a Blue Plaque.

In April 2009 The Guardian wrote an article on Dalston being the coolest place to live in Britain, follow this link to the full story

Dalston has its own hyperlocal news website, Dalston People. Funded by Associated Northcliffe Digital, the owners of the Daily Mail and Metro, the site is a pilot project and is written by local residents.

Pop-culture references

  • The seventh track on Razorlight's 2004 debut album Up All Night, is named Don't Go Back To Dalston.
  • Bad Manners' 1980 song "Night Bus to Dalston" is the B side of hit "Lip Up Fatty".
  • The fifth track of Snowpony's 2001 album "Sea Shanties for Spaceships", is named "into the heart of dalston".
  • In the second series of TV show The Mighty Boosh, Vince, Howard, Naboo and Bollo share a flat in Dalston and in the third series they work in a second-hand shop - 'Nabootique' - there.
  • Mike Leigh's Naked featured exterior shots of 33 Saint Marks Rise. The interior scenes were also filmed in the top floor flat of this house.
  • In Stephen Frears' film Dirty Pretty Things, Audrey Tautou's character Senay Gelik lives in a flat overlooking Ridley Road's street market.
  • In the Doctor Who episode "Love & Monsters" Obsessive fan "Elton" had a market stall on the Ridley Road.
  • The 2007 film Run Fat Boy Run (directed by David Schwimmer) was filmed in Dalston (St. Marks Conservation Area). Dennis (Simon Pegg) stays in a flat on Sandringham Road across the road from St. Marks Church.
  • Dalston Songs is a staged song cycle with seven singers created and composed by Helen Chadwick and choreographed by Steven Hoggett. It was based on interviews with people in East London about home and was performed in 2008 at the Royal Opera House.
  • The Prodigy made their live debut at Labyrinth in Dalston, London’s Four Aces Club in 1990.
  • Award-winning short-film director Paul Fuller (Scarytree Films) is based in Dalston and shot most of his films in the area.
  • In The Mighty Boosh episode "Eels", character Howard Moon is referred to as "the biggest ball fondler in Dalston".

Transport and locale

Districts within the London Borough of Hackney.
Nearest railway stations

The nearest National Rail stations are Dalston Kingsland (North London Line) and Dalston Junction (East London Line) both are served by London Overground.

References

  1. ^ Mayor of London (2008). "London Plan (Consolidated with Alterations since 2004)" (PDF). Greater London Authority. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  2. ^ Dalston Junction Environmental Report accessed 30 October 2008
  3. ^ Hackney: Dalston and Kingsland Road, A History of the County of Middlesex: Volume 10: Hackney (1995), pp. 28-33 accessed: 07 December 2007
  4. ^ Open Dalston campaign accessed 27 May 2008