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Stroud Green Road

 
Wikipedia: Stroud
Green Road

Stroud Green Road is in north London, forming part of the boundary between the London Borough of Islington on its southern side and the London Borough of Haringey on the northern side. (Grid reference: TQ 311 871.) It is not widely known outside its local area, despite its twin roles as a populous thoroughfare linking the area of Crouch Hill with the major north London transport interchange of Finsbury Park station, and as the main local hub and shopping area for residents of the ill-defined area of Stroud Green itself. At its southerly end it intersects Seven Sisters Road and Blackstock Road at a major crossroads.

For readers whose interest is more concerned with a history of Stroud Green, that is dealt with in this page's associated Wikipedia article Stroud Green, London.

Contents

Facilities

There is an array of shops stretching the length of the road, including two supermarkets (Tesco Metro and the independent Woody's). Most of the shops are independent, and the choice of shops is described as "impressive" by Time Out[1]. The most unusual feature is perhaps the large cluster of wig shops at the Finsbury Park end of the road.

The wide selection of restaurants on Stroud Green Road range from the standard Indian and Chinese to the more exotic Mauritian and Caribbean. The street is home to the original branch of Italian-owned North London pizza restaurant chain La Porchetta. There are also several bars and pubs.

At the Finsbury Park end of the road is a bowling alley Rowans, and Finsbury Park Cycle Park (opened in 2006).

Feel

Stroud Green Road can become busy when the crowds spill out from Arsenal FC's Emirates Stadium or a popular music concert in Finsbury Park, both nearby.

However the Finsbury Park station end of the road, like the rest of the surroundings of the station, is markedly more run-down, blighted environmentally by parallel low railway bridges bringing the mass of overground lines into Finsbury Park station, and an ill-matched assortment of low-rise commercial buildings.

Even by the standards of London the road is frequented by a striking mix of races, cultures and classes - Time Out comments that "you only need to look at the local shops to sense how international the district is".[1]

Local transport

The street runs north from the transport hub of Finsbury Park, and stops just short just 150 yards south of Crouch Hill railway station on the Gospel Oak to Barking line. London bus routes W3, W7, and 210 run the length of Stroud Green Road, terminating at Finsbury Park. The low railway bridge of the Great Northern Electric Railway at Finsbury Park severs the possibility of running bus routes directly from areas north of Finsbury Park such as Stroud Green Road directly into central London.

Trivia

External links

Stroud Green

The wider local area

References

  1. ^ a b Lamont T. (ed): "London for Londoners", pp. 86-88. Time Out, 2006

Coordinates: 51°34′03″N 0°06′36″W / 51.56754°N 0.10987°W / 51.56754; -0.10987


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