Friday, 16 December 2011

yam and bread fruit




l to r: yellow yam, puna yam
......depending on who you ask, there are 194 countries in the world today, (see link below).
in more than 90 of these, yams and bread fruit are grown and eaten.

in our neighbourhood, if you want to cook them up for dinner, you can't find them in the local supermarkets, (waitrose and morrisons). people come from all over west london to buy these and many other fruit and vegetables from the specialist shops in shepherds bush market catering to overseas cuisine......



bread fruit

a full list of commonly eaten vegetables 'exclusively' found in shepherds bush market to be published shortly......

http://www.nationsonline.org

Wednesday, 14 December 2011

battles won


evening standard 12/12/11

last year burlington arcade, which runs from piccadilly through to burlington gardens, was bought by ‘property investors’. they commissioned ‘fashion’s favourite architect’, the american, peter marino to transform it.

here is what he has to say about his practice”

“a house is like a person. first you notice the overall size and scale, then the exterior and, finally the personality therein. if a design is schizophrenic and there’s a disconnect between the architecture and the interior, it’s usually unpleasant. If it’s harmonious, it’s a very pleasant place to be….my approach to a building, to an interior, to a piece of furniture, to a water glass, is always the same.”
http://www.architecturaldigest.com

despite such purity of working methods, mr. marino’s ideas fell foul of westminster council who demanded that there would not be “any changes that would ruin the character of the…arcade.”

film director michael winner, (whose family is rumoured to own/have owned shepherds bush market) called the plans a “disgraceful mutilation” and “typical of how beautiful areas of london are going to be vandalised.”

hear hear mr.winner

another of the councillors, glenys roberts said:

“it would be a terrible shame to sanitise such a site”

the arcade was opened in 1819, it is the forerunner of the modern shopping centre. It is certainly of more architectural interest than shepherds bush market, and being in the west end presumably benefits from the crowds of shoppers who grace it’s doors, but you can’t buy a yam or bread fruit in burlington arcade…….

Tuesday, 6 December 2011

doing like the israelis

A few weeks ago I read an article in the Observer newspaper (see link below) about a market in Jerusalem that was ""in very bad shape, economically, socially. The market was vanishing, the malls and supermarkets were taking all the people". I felt a sense of dèja vu so strong, it was as if I had been slapped in the face by the one I love.


The story goes that In 2000 the chairman of the Mahane Yehuda Market Traders Association, Eli Mizrahi, opened an espresso bar in the market. The bar was a success and slowly there followed an influx of restaurants, cafes and designer shops. The area was slowly and partially gentrified........


"The new businesses are not more than 10% or 20%, but they were the trigger for people to come back to the market."


I ask myself, I ask everyone, if Shepherds Bush Market is ailing in much the same way that the Mahane Yehuda was, is the solution to demolish large parts of the existing area and build houses? 
Why can we not find a solution to gently introduce a few businesses to the market which will increase trade for everyone?


http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/nov/13/jerusalem-dispatch-bar-reopens