The Frommers Guide (ibid) which features the street is published at the end of the month. You can buy it from all sorts of places, but the cheapest so far is at Amazon.
Here's an extract, quaintly American in its feel.
"Little Green Street isn't in the center of London, but maybe that's why
it survived so long-it's one of only a few intact Georgian streets left
in the whole metropolis. These two-story brick houses may have survived
the Blitz in World War II, but the inexorable march of gentrification
is another thing altogether.
It's not even a full neighborhood, just a 1-block-long street, a
narrow cobblestoned lane lined on both sides with perhaps a dozen
modest 18th-century terraced houses.
What's especially ironic is that the houses of Little Green
Street, just off Highgate Road in Kentish Town, aren't themselves being
knocked down. They are listed as Grade II historic properties, which in
British parlance means they're entitled to a certain degree of landmark
protection. No, it's the street itself that lies in danger, by an
accident of urban geography. The land behind Little Green Street now
stands derelict, and a developer won initial approval to build an
underground parking garage, 20 new houses, and a block of flats there.
Just north of trendy Camden Town and east of posh Hampstead, Kentish
Town is no doubt ripe for gentrification. There's only one catch: To
build those new structures, trucks and heavy construction equipment
would have to be routed up and down Little Green Street.
The street comes honestly by its name: Little Green Street is
only 2.5m (8 ft.) wide. Lorries and backhoes would barely scrape
through this lane, coming within inches of the terrace's neatly painted
front doors and bow windows. What's more, no studies had been done to
test how much the constant rumbling and vibrations of that traffic
would affect the foundations of these 225-year-old buildings, given a
projected construction period of 4 years.
Little Green Street looks like a perfect slice of Regency
London; it's been celebrated in the poetry of that quintessentially
British poet John Betjeman, and used as the setting for music videos
and photo shoots. The campaign to save Little Green Street has not only
knit together the dozen families who live there, it has attracted
actors, writers, musicians, and others concerned with preserving
London's historic character. On February 28, 2008, the Camden Town
Council denied the developers construction access to Little Green
Street, but the appeals process continues. Little Green Street's safety
is by no means certain. Stay tuned".
All very nice, but I'd trade fame for peace and quiet any day.
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