Tuesday, 5 July 2011
Thems Please
Monday, 20 September 2010
Chats Palace Exhibition
In this exhibition, words and images we have gathered over the last year tell the story of Chatsworth Road.
Shops like ‘Chatsworth Tyre Service’ and the butcher ‘Mighty Meats’ have been run by the same family for decades. The computer repair shop doubles as a Koranic school. In the last few years, a French deli, juice bar and gourmet coffee shop have appeared alongside the Kashmiri kebab shop and Jamaican takeaway.
Each plays their own part in keeping alive this peculiar and wonderful street.We felt compelled to capture and share these diverse stories before they disappear forever.
8th October - 27th November
Open Wed–Sat
12–5pm (‘til 9pm Thu)
Tel: 0771 874 9895
Info, images, interviews
Contact Jane, jegginton@btopenworld.com
Chats Palace
42-44 Brooksby's Walk
London E9 6DF
www.chatspalace.com
London Overground – Homerton
Buses – 236, 242 and 276
Friday, 23 July 2010
The Juice Bar
The French Deli
Regal Pharmacy
“We have been in Chatsworth Road for 45 years’ says the owner, Jay. We used to own the pharmacy in what used to be the old post office, then in 1989 we moved to a place across the road, before moving here in 1998. We also used to have a sweet shop, where the internet shop is now, next to William Hill. It would be lovely to have a market. Beautiful.” Jay remembers when the market was here. “You couldn’t move it was so busy. One of the last market stalls was called Jack and Jill and sold fruit and veg. It sadly shut up shop in 1995. Our counter sales have dropped 50% in the last ten years but we are becoming increasingly health orientated, particularly in terms of natural health and we are also offering more services to the community.
In the photo is Harish, Pinar, Jay, Vipul, the manager, and Louise
East London Locks

'I think Chatsworth, which everyone calls Chats, is a fantastic road. I have had an office here since 1998 and if I don’t come here, I get withdrawal symptoms.' Mike the owner grew up on the old Bethnal Green Road and works here with his son, Huseyin, whose mother is from Cyprus. I think the market would suit the area, which I have seen really improving. There are lots of new businesses setting up, like the toyshop, the bookshop, the deli and the funky juice bar.
Too Sweet
This Caribbean takeaway, open every day from 11.30 to 10, does a brisk trade in patties, stewed chicken, oxtail, fried dumpling and chicken foot soup. Kevin, who is Jamaican, has owned this shop, which used to be opposite the funeral parlour, for ten years. ‘We have everyone coming here, not just Africans and West Indians. Even Vinny Jones comes here. There is a really nice community here and we are always very busy. We just want the market and to make people appreciate it.” One of Kevin’s customer comes here every day. He always orders ‘rasta man food like ackee and saltfish’ and Jamaican bun, which is a kind of cake, served with cheese, saying: “I wouldn’t come anywhere else; this place is the best. You get proper food and don’t ever get a belly ache”.
Star Discount Store
Ismail, Riza, Gazi and Huseyin are four Kurdish brothers who have been living in London for 20 years. The owners of the fruit and veg shop sold it in February 2009 and opened up this discount shop next door the same month. All now in their 60s, they were finding getting up at 2am to go to Spitalfields too exhausting, although they still work 12 hours a day, six days a week and struggle to compete with supermarkets as some cash and carry prices are higher than in the big chains.
BJ Fashions
Kashmir Kebabish
Hop
Chatsworth Laundry
There has been a launderette on this site for 50 years. Before that it was an Off Licence. 22-year-old owner Zak, originally from Gujarat, India, has been running things since he was just 18. With a penchant for expensive sports cars, when the smell of marijuana began to permeate the premises last year, all the old ladies doing their laundry assumed it was him. The police then discovered that his neighbour was growing and harvesting a plantation of 100, human sized specimens. Open until midnight every day, Chatsworth Laundry serves the local population as well as businesses throughout London, with pick ups from commercial premises throughout Hackney and the West End. 'We get everyone here really, but at one time there was nothing much here; now it is becoming really trendy.'
Monday, 31 May 2010
Book Box
The owners of the bookshop, the Book Box, live above the shop. Downstairs is a ceramics cafe, where customers can paint their own pottery while indulging in ice cream, cup cakes and milkshakes. It was an old fashioned barbers before it became a book shop and before that was Vanderbilt, the butchers.
Wednesday, 28 April 2010
'It's Dead in Here'
Pam from the Cooperative Funeral Parlour at 80 Chatsworth Road has a good sense of humour. 'It's dead in here', she cackles, enjoying the pun. 'Even here we are suffering from lack of business. People have to register their deaths at the Town Hall in Mare Street where there is a co-op so we get left out. We do have a chapel of rest here but it is rather damp. The council planted a tree outside – we didn’t want it – it went through a gas main.'
Sunday, 25 April 2010
Chatsworth Supermarket
Asif is the manager of the 24-hour Chatsworth Supermarket, which has an Eastern European Social & Snooker Club downstairs with a huge TV screen showing Turkish programmes and sport. “I used to run Altun across the road with my family. We did it for four years but it just became too hard, because of the long hours and too much competition on Chatsworth Road with so many shops selling the same thing. We were working 14, 15 and 16 hour days. I still work 12 or 13 hours six days a week.“
Sunday, 18 April 2010
Cobblers
A dusty galosh dangles on one wall and an ancient platform boot swings from the ceiling next to a truncated Eiffel tower. Hanging above the counter stuffed full of cottons, elastics, screws and bits of paper is a single lime green cowboy boot, which remains unclaimed since the owner went into prison in 1972.
Claiming his is the oldest shop in the street, the owner, 75-year-old Suleyman from Cyprus bought the cobblers in 1967 and still makes and repairs shoes on the premises. Learning his trade as a shepherd in his home country, where he first crafted shoes under a tree looking after his herd, he brought his self-taught trade to London with him and has never stopped. ‘I love it. I have so much energy for shoes.’
'Many people who buy cheap shoes now don't want to pay for repairs; usually I make them pay first and still they don't come back'. His sign clearly says: 'We will only keep your shoes for three months', although one woman came back shouting: 'You lost my shoes' – after three years. With more than 100 pairs of unclaimed shoes in the workshop at the back, it is clear that a lot of the footwear has been in the shop a great deal longer than that. Suleyman is a self-confessed hoarder who never throws anything away, who has four sewing machines in the shop and another four ‘spare’. ‘People say: ‘ooh, you have a lot of stock, look at all this stock’, but stock is money and if you have cash you spend it.’
Also on offer are knife sharpening, key cutting and sewing machine repairs. ‘I do everything. You have to. The market here was good; things were much better then and there were a lot more people’. Today the ‘Repairs’ sign outside the shop is falling apart and missing an ‘R’ and the distinctly faded window display complete with debris and dead plants appears to have remained unchanged since the shop opened. Yet Suleyman, smiling, remains optimistic, saying: ‘When a tiger is hungry, what does he do? He looks for food. And that is how customers find me.’ With rates at £1,400 a month and recently introduced parking restrictions, he admits to struggling, but says for him his work is his hobby and offers to design and make to measure a pair of boots for me for £200.
Getting up at 4am, he opens the shop daily from 7am to 4pm ‘because I want to talk to people’. 'Everyone in Chatsworth Road calls me Dad', says Suleyman, who still walks the length of the high street several times a week. ‘I am very happy. I spend my life here.’
Sunday, 11 April 2010
Shutting Up Shop
The dentist on the corner of Dunlace and Chatsworth Road, which reportedly had blood on the ceiling and always felt more like a dodgy cab office than anywhere you would go for your health, closed around three years ago and is still empty. The disused mobile phone shop next door is now used as a prayer room. Next door to that, Halah Meat and Groceries has been closed for at least two years. A row of three disused shops (numbers 33, 35 and 37 Chatsworth Road) is a sad statistic and hopefully one that is not the shape of things to come on the street. Happily, one door down, at number 39, The Regent is a hive of activity six days a week.



