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Question for Londoners...
21 Answers
Well actually, anyone who knows London quite well.
As some of you may know from my constant hand wringing, hair pulling whinging on various other topics on AB I am looking for a room to rent in London. I've joined all the usual forums etc.. so that's not a problem.
Howevere I've been quite stubbon about looking mainly in South East London and it's been pointed out to me (several times) that realistically I work in central London and I should consider options in North London too as I'm spending a lot of time travelling (3hours in total a day)... When I finished recoiling in shock and horror at the suggestion I have to admit it does make sense for me to look there too.
I don't know North London very well at all and so I was wondering if anyone had any suggestions for me of nice areas in North London, preferably with a Victoria or Northern Line Tube Station.
Cheers
China
As some of you may know from my constant hand wringing, hair pulling whinging on various other topics on AB I am looking for a room to rent in London. I've joined all the usual forums etc.. so that's not a problem.
Howevere I've been quite stubbon about looking mainly in South East London and it's been pointed out to me (several times) that realistically I work in central London and I should consider options in North London too as I'm spending a lot of time travelling (3hours in total a day)... When I finished recoiling in shock and horror at the suggestion I have to admit it does make sense for me to look there too.
I don't know North London very well at all and so I was wondering if anyone had any suggestions for me of nice areas in North London, preferably with a Victoria or Northern Line Tube Station.
Cheers
China
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by China Doll. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The idea it takes longer or is more difficult to get from South London than it does from North London is total rubbish.
However if you want to live in a dump go for North London.
The fact you have mentioned the Northern and Victoria Lines only serves to make the point. Both are rubbish, over crowded and totally unreliable.
Where exactly will you be working?
However if you want to live in a dump go for North London.
The fact you have mentioned the Northern and Victoria Lines only serves to make the point. Both are rubbish, over crowded and totally unreliable.
Where exactly will you be working?
Hi all,
I already live (and like living) in London in the south east not a million miles away from Peckham. It already takes me about an hour and a half to get in to work (buses really awful of late, no idea why!). Anyway.. I figured that maybe I was being a bit fussy trying to find somewhere in my current location and it does make more sense to be closer to work with the journey I guess.
West London I don't really know at all but I always had the impression it was rather posh and expensive?
I just don't want to live in East London full stop. :c(
I've been told Stanford Hill is nice, Highbury and Islington are ok, I quite like Camden anyway and then after that I don't know owt about North London.
I already live (and like living) in London in the south east not a million miles away from Peckham. It already takes me about an hour and a half to get in to work (buses really awful of late, no idea why!). Anyway.. I figured that maybe I was being a bit fussy trying to find somewhere in my current location and it does make more sense to be closer to work with the journey I guess.
West London I don't really know at all but I always had the impression it was rather posh and expensive?
I just don't want to live in East London full stop. :c(
I've been told Stanford Hill is nice, Highbury and Islington are ok, I quite like Camden anyway and then after that I don't know owt about North London.
the Northern line is still called the misery line, isn't it? There may be a reason for this. The Victoria line is better; plus there are the Bakerloo, Jubilee and Metropolitan lines. These will whisk you away fairly quickly (a lot less than 3 hours a day, anyway). If you want somewhere moderately buzzy you might consider the Queen's Park/Kensal Rise area or Islington. If you don't mind living in inner suburbia, but handy to the West End, the Jubilee and Victoria lines get there fast. None of this is super-cheap (nowhere near a tube station ever is) but they're mostly reasonable, I think.
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Sara - Don't be too mortified, it's not your fault I think N.London is a hole! ;0)
Don't even start with the cockerneyness... Pickle and jno! Mole indeed... how very dare you!
Quin - How in blazes are you getting to Oxford Circus in 40 mins?! At the moment I'm getting a bus to Waterloo or Vauxhall and jumping on a tube from there to get to the station nearest me. And I don't think Tulse Hill is that far from me!
Don't even start with the cockerneyness... Pickle and jno! Mole indeed... how very dare you!
Quin - How in blazes are you getting to Oxford Circus in 40 mins?! At the moment I'm getting a bus to Waterloo or Vauxhall and jumping on a tube from there to get to the station nearest me. And I don't think Tulse Hill is that far from me!
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Ah... well that's not too bad then IAP! I'll be looking at your link in more depth tomorrow evening as I'm being pulled in ten different directions at the moment (see Family) and won't have time to have a really good trawl through til then. I've started having a nosy though, cheers poppet.
Triggs - I could do that but not only would the commute be a bit harsh I suspect the idea of never seeing a blue sky again might get to me ;0)
Triggs - I could do that but not only would the commute be a bit harsh I suspect the idea of never seeing a blue sky again might get to me ;0)
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China Doll - it seems the bus is your problem, total waste of time going on the bus.
You need to get yourself a place near a main line train station, I live in Hayes, on the edge of Kent really nice area, very cheap and train takes 35 mins to Charing Cross, and thats a long way out of town, not suggesting you move there but just highlighting that even that far out it's relatively quick on the train.
You already seem to be in the right area, you just need to get on those trains rather than the bus. Takes 15 minutes from Peckham Rye to London (08:32 arrives at Victoria at 8:47) and then a short tube ride (9 minutes according to the TFL website). So add on 6 mins to get down the tube and make connections that's a 30 minute journey.
The places you mention Angel, Camden, Highbury and Islington are all half decent but it costs a fortune to live around there.
No doubt much of North London is OK, but same with South London, I just find it really odd that people disregard South London completely when in reality the difference in distance (as everything is pretty central) is the width of a river.
You need to get yourself a place near a main line train station, I live in Hayes, on the edge of Kent really nice area, very cheap and train takes 35 mins to Charing Cross, and thats a long way out of town, not suggesting you move there but just highlighting that even that far out it's relatively quick on the train.
You already seem to be in the right area, you just need to get on those trains rather than the bus. Takes 15 minutes from Peckham Rye to London (08:32 arrives at Victoria at 8:47) and then a short tube ride (9 minutes according to the TFL website). So add on 6 mins to get down the tube and make connections that's a 30 minute journey.
The places you mention Angel, Camden, Highbury and Islington are all half decent but it costs a fortune to live around there.
No doubt much of North London is OK, but same with South London, I just find it really odd that people disregard South London completely when in reality the difference in distance (as everything is pretty central) is the width of a river.