Showing posts with label N19. Show all posts
Showing posts with label N19. Show all posts

Friday, 28 July 2017

All Zenned Out

We all know Ian is a cool and chilled out guy but now he's gone all Zen on us!  That is the Zero Emissions Network, and we are Archway's latest member.

One of the downsides of living and working in a thriving area like Archway is that the air quality here is some of the worst in London (which, unsurprisingly, has some of the worst in the UK). Some of the causes are obvious, busy roads used by lorries, cars, buses and taxis, but some are surprising too - bet you didn't know that residential boilers are a major contributor to the problem. Before you dismiss this is merely a nuisance, extra dirt to clean away or unpleasant smells, think about this: the Royal College of Physicians calculates that poor air quality causes 10,000 early deaths a year in London. Poor air exacerbates cardio vascular and cardio pulmonary diseases and it is especially bad for children. If all this wasn't depressing enough, the cost of poor air health impacts across the UK are calculated at £15 - £20 billion. (£20 billion is over 15% of the current NHS budget.)

So what can we do? We have signed up to  Archway Zen.  We only employ local people who can walk to work or use public transport.  No one from Map Gift Shop drives to the area bringing in pollution.  We have carried out an energy efficiency audit of the shop, and implemented all the energy saving measures.  Finally we have installed some pollution eating plants and cycle locking planters.   Which not only are fragrant and look great but have a practical and we think aesthetic value too!

Helping to make Archway a healthier place to live and work. 

Saturday, 8 October 2016

Time Out Love London Awards - we have been nominated AGAIN!

"Last year’s Love London Awards saw 16,000 nominations and 75,000 votes cast for 5,000 venues across the city. That, as Led Zeppelin once said, is a whole lotta love."



We are thrilled to have been nominated again!  Regulars to this blog (who have been paying attention) will know that we won this prestigious award 2 years running.  We'd love to make it 3 in a row! We're in great company!  We're up against 2 friends Deli Junction and Harriet Wilde.

There is still confusion surrounding the name or our area.  We are big fans of Archway, both it's name and nature, and we vehemently resist the temptation (mainly led by local Estate Agents) to rebrand our beloved Archway with a name change.  In fact, we think areas such as Highgate and Highbury should consider renaming themselves - Upper and Lower Archway........But in terms of postcodes Archway doesn't exist.  We are Upper Holloway as designated by the Post Office 100 years ago, and the Time Out Love London Award has taken these postcode areas rather than the name of our town centre!  Surely it can only be due to this confusion that there weren't enough venues nominated in the pubs & bars category for Time Out to open it up to the vote?  I think St john's Tavern & Charlotte Despard (both previous winners) can rightfully feel a little miffed again.

Rant over........It’s time for you to champion your favourite bits of Upper Holloway that everyone else who lives here knows as Archway. The polls are open! So click here to have a look at who has been nominated in Upper Holloway & get voting!

Voting is open until October 31 - you can vote in as many categories as you like, but remember that you can only vote for ONE venue per category,  Once you’re done, remember to jump on social media with the #LoveLondonAwards hashtag.








Wednesday, 10 December 2014

Islington Faces

Islington Faces
Everyone has a story. Archway is due a complete makeover by 2016 – but already Junction Road, N19 is a surprisingly good place to go for gifts, food, pet supplies and pubs. Here’s how Ian Morris, co-owner of the wonderful Map gift shop has helped improve his bit of Islington. Interview by Nicola Baird

Ian Morris with a 1904 photo of his shop. Back then it was a butcher’s shop. Even now the pink-fronted Map Gift Shop on Junction Road has butchers’ hooks.
Ian Morris with a 1904 photo of his shop. Back then it was a butcher’s shop. Even now the pink-fronted Map Gift Shop on Junction Road has butchers’ hooks.
“We always put up our Christmas display on the first Sunday after Halloween. Over the years I’ve seen parents with children come in November to buy special Christmas decorations for their tree. It’s a tradition for them,” says the very friendly Ian Morris who runs Map Gift Store on Junction Road in Upper Holloway (what the rest of us call Archway).
The striking pink store along this swiftly gentrifying shopping street was once a butcher’s shop – one of five. Now it’s a Christmas gift buyers’ paradise stocked with baubles, cards, jewelry, novelties, books and scented candles. Whatever the season, Map also offers gift wrapping – this may feel like cheating, but it certainly makes your present look exceedingly stylish.
Ian, 56 this month, is a brilliant champion of Archway. For some years he’s been part of the Town Centre group – run by traders with help from Islington Council’s Anna Woodward and Sarah Hitchcock. “Over the past few years the group has focused on improving the appearance and conception people have of Archway. The group has run many schemes such as visual merchandising, business development and allocating grants to improve the look and feel of Archway to enable locally-owned shops to compete with bigger business,” says Ian.
As Archway is due a complete makeover by 2016 – with three major building redevelopments and a re-routing of the busy A1, helping the shops to cope with these changes can only be a good thing.
In 2013 Map Gift shop got its own makeover – renovating it with a curved glass window just as it was in 1904.

Ian Morris: co-owner of Map Gift Shop: “Christmas is our busiest time but then it’s Valentines, Mother’s Day and Easter. Summer is probably our least busy time – however tourist trade can be good.” (c) Map Gift Shop
Ian Morris: co-owner of Map Gift Shop: “Christmas is our busiest time but then it’s Valentines, Mother’s Day and Easter. Summer is probably our least busy time – however tourist trade can be good.” (c) Map Gift Shop
“When the Northern line was built every property was photographed in case there was subsidence,” explains Ian showing me the old photo with a butchers’ block outside where the meat was cut up and hooks for carcasses hanging all round the outside. “Back then the station was called Highgate. We wanted to change the shop frontage to how it was over 100 years ago.
Fortunately subsidence hasn’t been a problem, even though you can hear the trains from Map’s basement. But over the 20th century Archway suffered from other problems: its department store and an Odeon cinema shut, as did the butchers shops. Fortunately it seems the doldrums are over: Archway is not just looking better, it is bustling again with daytime shoppers and night time revellers. “Many Archway stores are taking part in the Islington-backed regeneration scheme, smartening up and regaining a sense of their local importance,” explains Ian.
Even Ian – with his business partner Kathryn Phalp– have had several reincarnations. They began in 1990 selling decorated ceramics, moving in 1993 to Junction Road (at 165 which is now a flower shop). “We were selling to many stores such as Saks 5th Avenue, Heals and Liberty and shops as far away as Singapore and Hong Kong, but we decided to switch from wholesale to retail business,” explains Ian.
“We wanted to sell a mix of locally made items and I really enjoy meeting clients.People in Archway are a fascinating mix and many customers have become close friends. There are a lot of artists and designers in the area. Even now we sell their jewellery, cards and some stationery. The Lazy Leopard books are made by Nina Dogmetchi who used to work with us, then went to the Royal College of Art and is now forging a career as a successful illustrator.”
Eventually the business partners moved to their current home, 93 Junction Road, and sold the kilns to make more room for stock.

Jacqui Staniforth opened Deli Junction, which stocks unique locally produced items from Tottenham cheese to Islington-smoked salamis, in November. Her son, Eden, is in charge of the coffee.
Jacqui Staniforth opened Deli Junction, which stocks unique locally produced items from Tottenham cheese to Islington-smoked salamis, in November. Her son, Eden, is in charge of the coffee.
Five places Ian Morris likes around Archway
  • Ian, is a proper champion of Archway. He has lived in the area since 1991, but his home is currently in Islington, just off Stroud Green Road.
  • All day I’m looking at two pubs – though I don’t drink. St Johns’ Tavern, 91 Junction Road, N19 is a great gastro pub with a big dining room. If you look at the 1st floor you can see where the brickwork changes. That’s a repair after a bomb went off in World War Two. TheOak and Pastor is good too and it has an upstairs party room. 86 Junction Road, N19.
  • There’s a new deli three doors down, Junction Deli, which has got Tottenham cheese.
  • I do a lot of local shopping in Yildiz (the baker and café) and the co-op.
  • I go to the Gate Café run by Fiona on Archway Island. She makes cakes and pastries beautifully. And there’s a small garden. I sometimes go there for lunch when it is quiet. @TheGateArchway
  • You’ll often see me jogging in the borough.
Ian’s background is textiles – he’s spent time lecturing at Loughborough, Harrow and Bristol. “I do miss the creative side,” explains Ian who is often in the shop but also regularly goes to drawing and painting classes. He’s also surrounded by beautiful designs that he and Kathryn have hand picked as potential gifts. In the store at the moment there are some ceramics that make you want to sink into a cosy sofa and sip hot chocolate… Such a feeling isn’t unusual it seems, as recently MAP’s customers voted it as the best shop in the area in the 2014Time Out local shop awards.

Ian Morris from Map Gift Shop: “When we redecorated we thought of a classic colour, greys and greens, but we’re known as the pink shop, and our customers wanted us to stay pink. This colour is actually Russian velvet.”
Ian Morris from Map Gift Shop: “When we redecorated we thought of a classic colour, greys and greens, but we’re known as the pink shop, and our customers wanted us to stay pink. This colour is actually Russian velvet.”
But running a shop, which employs five staff, needs a strong business understanding and local savvy, not just idiosyncratic or beautiful taste. That’s why you’ll find state of the art tills, cycle parking outside and money spent on disability accessibility. “We have a customer, Diane, who became ill and couldn’t come up the step. I would have to stand in the door and show her cards in the wind and rain. It was awful for her,” explains Ian, “it’s what made me want to champion Archway as a disabled friendly place.”
If you’ve never been to Map, then making a visit for Christmas shopping might be the perfect time. Indeed making a trip to Junction Road to shop and then pop into some of the restaurants and pubs just a few metres from Archway tube is going to be quite a surprise for anyone who doesn’t yet realise just what’s going on in Archway, Upper Holloway or as the estate agents allegedly call it, ‘Highgate Slopes’. Whatever name you pick, the area is changing fast. Go see.
Map Gift Shop, 93 Junction Road, N19.
 Open seven days a week, check times: tel: 020 7687 4005. http://www.mapgiftshop.com/
 @mapgiftshop

Friday, 12 September 2014

Bleeding London - We're in are you?



The London Region of the Royal Photographic Society is inviting Londoners, and visitors to the capital to participate in one of the most ambitious photo projects that the capital has ever seen – to photograph every street in London.  Based on the Whitbread short-listed novel, Bleeding London by Geoff Nicholson ( the ultimate read for any London freak. Nicholson describes the enormousness and enormity of London with a mix of pleasure and disgust as the character Stuart  walks every street in the trusty A-Z, crossing them out as he goes along!)  The RPS are challenging Londoners and visitors to follow in the footsteps of Stuart London and cover the entire A to Z documenting their journey as they go! One of our customers Jen Pedler - local resident and local historian has risen to that challenge and has now succeeded in photographing every street in N19.  If that wasn't enough of a challenge she has been blogging about her journey with witty ramblings and musings about the streets she has walked.  Her posts are packed with amusing insights, local information and historical references (click here to see her blog in full)

"Archway town centre was decimated in the '60s by the creation of the gyratory. There was much protest but gyratories were in fashion then so it went ahead, with much demolition involved, including some early C19 almshouses just east of Archway Road.  What Philistines planners were in the '60s!

Now, 50 or so years later, it's going to be all change again. Much to everyone's relief, after years of campaigning, the hated gyratory is to be abolished. The sins of the fathers...? But then, abolishing gyratories is fashionable these days....."




Jen's blog features loads of interesting photographs - I'd never noticed this house - number 32 1/2 Bickerton Road! 


The genius positioning of McDonalds.


I also liked this one amusingly titled "Alcoholic Reflections" featuring our fellow traders Theatre of Wine.



Jen has now moved on to photographing N6 and is continuing her blog.  She has promised an instalment on Junction Road later in the series - we're really looking forward to it!

The Royal Photographic Society is hoping to have covered all the streets by the end of October, with a view to a major exhibition and book in 2015.

If you are interested in participating - another local photographer Gandha Key has been requesting help with the 180 odd streets of N7!  if you can help sign up with Bleeding London here!