Anxieties of Gentrification: BRICK LANE

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  • čas přidán 23. 04. 2024
  • Uncover the layers of history and change in Brick Lane as we delve into the complexities of gentrification. Join us on a journey through time and community resilience. #GentrificationBrickLane #CommunityHistory
    #London #gentrificacion #Gwarnin

Komentáře • 120

  • @fwildhan2106
    @fwildhan2106 Před měsícem +14

    I always knew about the rich history of Brick Lane, but listening to the commentary, as well as the interviews with locals, has really opened my eyes to just how important it is to preserve it. It'd be such a shame to see it go. Instead of improving the area and assisting people, it's almost as if the community is being abandoned and replaced completely

    • @Gianfranco_69
      @Gianfranco_69 Před měsícem

      "Preserve" what exactly..... like you give a shit about preserving any other parts of Londons 'Identity'...
      We can all see what the complaint is here and its rich...its cheeky AF

  • @haneef.o
    @haneef.o Před měsícem +6

    This is quality production. Amazinggg job!!

  • @alicemendez9660
    @alicemendez9660 Před měsícem +42

    So the gentrification of London is just native Brits (white) coming back to the place there ancestors actually built, making it cleaner and safe . Its just so ironic that these ppl are moaning about demographic changes yet they did the same thing to a group that have existed there for hundreds of years

    • @somaliking4207
      @somaliking4207 Před měsícem +8

      Yeah kinda thought it was a bit ironic

    • @juniormartin3528
      @juniormartin3528 Před měsícem

      alicemendez, there's not lot of y'all.

    • @TheAnnoor
      @TheAnnoor Před měsícem +23

      Gentrification also affects the many white working class residents in London and accross the UK, its when the working class populate the area with culture and livelihood, then the demand from middle class comes in and overtakes the financial abilities of the locals

    • @danielcunningham6727
      @danielcunningham6727 Před měsícem +10

      But it's not though it's corporations building "luxury" apartments and opening "artisan " shops making the area unaffordable go common folk but yeah ok....

    • @Goldlion973
      @Goldlion973 Před měsícem +5

      The problem is that native brits lack a spine and rather than face the problems caused by historical attitudes of *feudalism* become cowards and decide to racialise their problems instead.
      The problem has always been land ownership to the detriment of common folk. It's replete throughout English history and the native English experience.

  • @errthangarchitecture
    @errthangarchitecture Před měsícem +4

    This was amazing. Very Informative. Great editing. The best part was the diverse views from different groups of people, very unbiased. That's what i call real journalism!

    • @Gwarnin.studio
      @Gwarnin.studio  Před měsícem +1

      thank you! tonnes of effort had gone into the video! I'm glad you like it!

  • @abigailjoseph6908
    @abigailjoseph6908 Před měsícem +1

    This was a great video - I'm very happy it was recommended to me on my homepage! It was all very interesting but my favourite parts were the interviews with the young people from different parts of London and that man who had lived in Brick Lane for 50 years and then the conversation you had with your dad. I'd love to see more videos exploring themes like this! Also loved the use of archive footage

  • @alansouthall8221
    @alansouthall8221 Před měsícem +19

    trying to preserve an area is pointless.
    if it was preserved 30 years ago, it wouldnt be what it is today.
    and what does preserving actually mean? preventing investment? not allowing people to leave? not allowing people to move in? keeping it poor?

    • @storm21410
      @storm21410 Před měsícem +2

      Exactly - if 30 years ago people wanted to preserve their areas, undoubtedly there would be little diversity re skin colour. I don't get why they're different

    • @alansouthall8221
      @alansouthall8221 Před měsícem

      @@storm21410 im not concerned about that to be honest. i value diverse areas, but places like brick lane can only flourish naturally. trying to impose or preserve some characteristic is completely self defeating. trying to preserve culture is completely pointless to be honest. it comes from within communities and can't be imposed or preserved artificially. to do so would be to impose it on an area. it just gets ugly quickly

    • @zacurrya9485
      @zacurrya9485 Před měsícem +2

      id say its about preserving the atmosphere and values whilst improving upon it, adding things on and making it newer. like rennovations for the communities needs rather than introducing new estates which don't maintain the vibe of what was there before.

    • @alansouthall8221
      @alansouthall8221 Před měsícem

      @@zacurrya9485 atmosphere and values are emergent and not the sort of thing that can be preserved or imposed on an area.
      cities and neighbourhoods should be dynamic and vibrant and emrgent
      that is how brick lane flourished in the first place.
      it just makes no sense to me to talk about gentrification. its a self defeating and patronising concept.
      mainly its people who like visiting places like brick lane that want to preserve them like some tourist attraction.

  • @NathanJonesCreations
    @NathanJonesCreations Před měsícem +4

    Great work, and something people need to know about lots of London - it feels almost like a clock with a tick list for gentrification. Which suburb is next to be bulldozed and turned into more flats and boring high street coffee shops and money for investors? I hope Brick Lane and many other parts of the city can be retained and kept for the people who make those communities.

    • @zacrushton2399
      @zacrushton2399 Před měsícem

      Brick Lane has bigger problems than coffee shops like the absolute lack of integration with British culture

  • @AAEse
    @AAEse Před měsícem +1

    This is really amazing!! As an east-London native I really appreciate this documentary

  • @simmydhillon7278
    @simmydhillon7278 Před měsícem +1

    What a video, this should be on TV!

  • @RubyTuesdayJB
    @RubyTuesdayJB Před měsícem +1

    This was a really good documentary. Thank you!

  • @Yeaam
    @Yeaam Před měsícem +1

    Wow simply. Wow. Unbelievable level of quality.

  • @4isaq
    @4isaq Před 28 dny

    Great work man!

  • @onlyfoolsandgeezers
    @onlyfoolsandgeezers Před měsícem +2

    great video, really interesting and thoughtful take on it, love the positiv message at the end to a very complex issue, hope to see more vids

  • @dujanahahmad3439
    @dujanahahmad3439 Před měsícem

    Great vid. Loved the style, and quality of the editing/look - also its relevance to ongoing debates!! really well done bro.

  • @EzraSprouts
    @EzraSprouts Před měsícem

    Brilliant video, really engaging. Covers a range of perspectives concisely without oversimplifying. Good to see an area from a grassroots perspective. Will watch this channel with interest

  • @redabitar
    @redabitar Před měsícem

    Great documentary that highlights the history of the area, and shines a light on the community's opinions.
    As a professional looking for a better opportunity, I moved to London 3 years ago. And in my experience, I have absolutely zero background about the social challenges that London as a whole faces, especially how gentrification has a strong ethnic and racial facet based on what I understand here.
    From my perspective, brick lane is generally seeing increased demand from people coming with higher spending capacity irrespective of race or ethnicity . To many people who move there, the question about race doesn't even come to mind - perhaps it is simply because of the rush of young professionals and students looking to buy/rent in a location closer to central London where they work, and with good transport links.
    This in turn makes it an attractive target for investors to build businesses and "upscale" the area.
    I wish you explored more this side of gentrification, and looked at where the new residents come from and why they chose brick lane.

  • @TheFrizz47
    @TheFrizz47 Před měsícem +1

    Ayyy man swear, good work bruv, high grade reportin right here. Keep it up!

  • @qlus
    @qlus Před měsícem

    Deserves more subs for this production quality bro

  • @reazallykhan8614
    @reazallykhan8614 Před měsícem +2

    Don’t forget why also the carnival started in west London

  • @mupfans5901
    @mupfans5901 Před měsícem

    i am in love with you and your content sir

  • @rbl1185
    @rbl1185 Před měsícem

    This was brilliant

  • @benwinstanleymusic
    @benwinstanleymusic Před měsícem

    Great video, really impressive quality!

  • @rupertbollywood1190
    @rupertbollywood1190 Před 28 dny

    I watched this and didn't see a single local complaining about gentrification there.

  • @Professional_Youtube_Commenter

    resdient of tower hamlets here. The worst part of gentrification isn't just that "wealthier people move in". I dont think wealthier people move in that much. An entire different household moves in which ruins the whole area. Brick lane is brought up by landlords who turn everything into HMOs. So you just get flatsharers living there temporarily - who dont care about the neighbourhood.
    Schools get smaller and smaller for the remaining families, playgrounds get reduced in size or just demoolished to make houses, and the vibe is just different. Where it used to be a community for locals, turns into a neighbourhood of strange faces where the people change often. It brings in drug dealers to feed the cocain habit of the city workers.
    In a council housing block, everyone knows everyone, they've lived there for generations. criminals can't loiter or feed off the area because residents are proactive and call the police/community support hotline and report everything. HMOs dont care - they will move elsewhere at the end of their tenancy so they dont complain or look after the area.
    Criminals find safe haven in these areas and work out of there to supply drugs and mug drunk people and all the rest of it.

    • @Gwarnin.studio
      @Gwarnin.studio  Před měsícem

      Absolutely, gentrification brings challenges, but let's focus on solutions that strengthen community bonds and ensure everyone feels at home, regardless of background or tenure. Together, we can preserve the essence of our neighbourhood while embracing positive change.

  • @ikenna4143
    @ikenna4143 Před měsícem

    I hope the community and culture is able to contunue to survive

  • @MizMite2002
    @MizMite2002 Před měsícem

    It all fell apart in Toronto after Covid. People no longer had the money for a 22 dollar drink at some upscale bar and sought out the cheap dive bars again.

  • @timesco2167
    @timesco2167 Před měsícem

    Good stuff mate

  • @zacrushton2399
    @zacrushton2399 Před měsícem +1

    I will be looking forward to a video about islamification in England it would be good to hear both sides of the story

  • @juniorbramble7760
    @juniorbramble7760 Před měsícem +1

    As DELROY WILSON...[sings]....."BETTER MUST COME" [ONE DAY].....✍🏿🇻🇨🇬🇧

  • @dfpguitar
    @dfpguitar Před měsícem

    You give me some confidence to speak bangla/sylheti. Everyone speaks so much faster and forcefully than me I thought theyd laugh at me. But you are the same.

  • @weekdayprogrammer
    @weekdayprogrammer Před měsícem

    Underground businesses look interesting to visit. How to get there?

  • @mellowado6184
    @mellowado6184 Před měsícem +22

    I just read Tower Hamlets was 79% white in 1981. Why did they all move out?

    • @kashattack
      @kashattack Před měsícem +16

      they didn't want ethnic neighbours

    • @mellowado6184
      @mellowado6184 Před měsícem +6

      @kashattack 😆 🤣 They filled out a questionnaire, did they?

    • @Gianfranco_69
      @Gianfranco_69 Před měsícem +10

      Nobody gave a shit about preserving that ..... its only Violin time if its the usual 'Communities'

    • @asa1973100
      @asa1973100 Před měsícem

      This place was nice before the whites moved in (( SAID NOBODY EVER ))

    • @Finggy
      @Finggy Před měsícem

      You keep on reading, while we live it.

  • @georgesymonds007
    @georgesymonds007 Před měsícem

    🔥🔥

  • @ffffilmss
    @ffffilmss Před měsícem +1

    This is only the start!! Can’t wait for more content!

  • @Finggy
    @Finggy Před měsícem

    My area ❤

  • @reazallykhan8614
    @reazallykhan8614 Před měsícem

    Man 😢

  • @chichi-ew3ts
    @chichi-ew3ts Před měsícem +2

    i thoroughly enjoyed this!! Especially interviewing localss. I loveee brick lane & how cultural it is. No spot in London like it.. idk. I think the community is what makes it as an outsider, the vintage markets,multicultural, the urban feel with the all over graffiti walls just makes brick lane a vibe

    • @Gwarnin.studio
      @Gwarnin.studio  Před měsícem

      Brick Lane is a lovely area with an amazing community. I loved every second of documenting Brick Lane, and I'm glad you enjoyed the video!

  • @zacurrya9485
    @zacurrya9485 Před měsícem

    6:50 faacts, the athletes village area is so soulless as well as the outskirts of westfield and olympic park

  • @chrisnolan7423
    @chrisnolan7423 Před 25 dny

    Oh ,so it is only Caucasian Brits that aren't allowed to question mass immigration.
    It is nice to see the Bengali community saving the UK from over doing it with to much immigration

  • @maculusso3327
    @maculusso3327 Před měsícem +4

    lets save brick lane

  • @Renzobeltranserra
    @Renzobeltranserra Před měsícem

    Guys i live in brick lane Is bangla town

  • @Finggy
    @Finggy Před měsícem

    Bangla Town 🇧🇩

  • @FionnCr
    @FionnCr Před měsícem +7

    Show me a bengali area that is clean in the UK.

    • @harbzsquadings2277
      @harbzsquadings2277 Před měsícem

      Anywhere within romford, all drug cartels who like it sly 😂😂

  • @yahyahussain478
    @yahyahussain478 Před měsícem +2

    THE EDITING IS TIPTOP

  • @muqyk
    @muqyk Před měsícem +3

    Gentrification is a symptom of capitalism. Priced out of your own community. We’re so politically apathetic (understandably so) we’re not fighting this on a wider level. We need to be more politically active (I’m not judging, I’m politically apathetic too).

    • @MaxLegr00m
      @MaxLegr00m Před měsícem

      No going back now mate. The time for political activism has long passed.

    • @muqyk
      @muqyk Před měsícem

      @@MaxLegr00m so where do we go now then?

    • @MaxLegr00m
      @MaxLegr00m Před měsícem +2

      @@muqyk move further and further out of London to places we can afford. At the same time, train ticket prices go up and up to price the working class out of commuting to half decent paying jobs. Then I imagine we’ll see a resurgence of the servant class.

    • @muqyk
      @muqyk Před měsícem +2

      @@MaxLegr00m so we just accept moving back to a feudal system?

  • @ymir5876
    @ymir5876 Před měsícem

    He talks about the importance of "preserving" the community and its history but acts if Brick Lane didnt have a community or history before the 1970's. This "documentary" is just upset that Brick Lane is becoming less Asian.

  • @97Bobson
    @97Bobson Před měsícem +2

    The quality of the subtitles is appalling. Learn to spell.

  • @user-dr1ee5bo3v
    @user-dr1ee5bo3v Před měsícem +1

    Great work man!