Daily Mail

It’s happening all over Britain: shops and businesses being wrecked by town hall bureaucrat­s hellbent on waging war on motorists. No wonder the retailers on this London road — once a favourite haunt of Nigella — are in despair . . . How draconian Low Traf

- By Harry Wallop

WANDSWORTH Bridge road in Fulham, south-west London, used to be a destinatio­n shopping street for discerning folk wanting to renovate their homes. It was a known mecca for swanky lighting designers, curtain and fabric shops, flooring specialist­s and furniture retailers. Grand designs’ Kevin McCloud had a lighting business in the area long before he was famous. added to that were upmarket restaurant­s, grocery shops and delicatess­ens that people would travel far to visit — not least nigella Lawson’s favourite butcher, randalls.

But the road has visibly fallen on hard times. thirty out of the 77 commercial units are vacant — a whopping 39 per cent, much higher than the national average of 14 per cent.

of course, high streets up and down the country are suffering, with retailers blaming crime, high rents, business rates and the cost-of-living crisis, as well as consumers’ increasing tendency to shop online. But why is this wealthy corner of London, where fourbedroo­m homes are on the market for £3.2 million, so badly hit?

the answer is traffic, say many businesses. In common with a growing number of streets in towns and cities across the country, it is the victim of traffic- control measures introduced by the local authority designed to improve the urban environmen­t but which, many say, have only made things worse while killing off local businesses and shops.

so dramatic is the decline in trade and customer footfall in this part of London, according to shopkeeper­s, it serves as a chilling example of how town hall bureaucrat­s anywhere can ruin livelihood­s by introducin­g green policies in the teeth of local opposition.

In this case, Labour- run hammersmit­h & Fulham Council has introduced a Clean air neighbourh­ood scheme that covers the area. In an attempt to stop so-called ‘rat runners’ using side streets, residents with vehicles registered in the borough can drive through them, but those who aren’t from the borough are banned from doing so.

the result is that visitors’ vehicles that would have used these side streets are all funnelled down the wandsworth Bridge road and the adjacent new Kings road, causing an endless traffic jam according to locals. the scheme, introduced three years ago, has been extended as a trial across a far greater area for the past year.

the council says the measures have taken 15,000 cars off the roads across south Fulham every day. It also claims that in the first few months of the trial being extended in 2023, ‘there was a 54.6 per cent increase’ in consumer spending along the road compared with the previous year.

Many business owners dispute these figures. they also point out that a large number of customers — the elderly, the disabled, those buying heavy items such as furniture — need their cars.

similar battles between shopkeeper­s and councils are taking place across Britain. the vast majority of people want to see pollution and traffic reduced on Britain’s roads — but is this really the best way of going about it?

to find out, the daily Mail spoke to business owners on wandsworth Bridge road or in its immediate vicinity, as well as some who have recently quit the area. what they revealed should give our town planners pause for thought . . .

No 60 New Kings Road: Hally’s cafe

despIte being around the corner from wandsworth Bridge road, this cafe is affected by traffic measures, says owner anna halliday, 38, who started her business in 2013.

For the first eight years, business was booming. ‘we’d have a queue out of the door at weekends,’ she says. Many customers drive. ‘people come here to meet up. It’s a real hub. But no one wants to sit in the traffic to come here any more. Business has dropped off a cliff.’

she says that up until the clean-air measures, the cafe was ‘making a decent profit’. Last year she was making an operationa­l loss of £10,000 a month, meaning she has cut back on staff hours.

she is particular­ly upset that, when she spoke up about her problems, she received abuse from some locals. ‘ I’ve had people coming in here and shouting at me, calling us selfish. It’s so divisive.’

No 283 New Kings Road: Allison Rodger couture

aLLIson rodGer, whose designs have appeared in Vogue, moved to her Fulham shop six years ago. ‘My clientele are not local, they come from Chelsea, from Gloucester­shire, wiltshire, sussex, all over. they all complain about the traffic and the fines.’

Business has fallen 50 per cent and she is now having to do far more of her trade online. ‘ But that’s a nightmare. I am creative! e! I don’t want to spend my time me dealing with It.’

No 90-92 Wandsworth Bridge Road: Vacant

UntIL october 2023, it was occupied by hector Finch, ,a successful lighting designer who moved here in 1995. ‘It was thriving. rivr there was a real character to the place. designers would bring ing clients to visit all the different ent shops,’ says emma, hector’s wife, ife, who jointly runs the business.

they have moved out to nearby rby Chelsea harbour. ‘ people just ust stopped coming. It was very sad.’ ad.’ she reckons footfall dropped by ‘at least 50 per cent’. ‘wandsworth rth Bridge road has been known for the past three years as a traffic ffic jam. the perception of the cleanair anket scheme is that you’ll get a ticket or there is nowhere to park.’

No 99: Vacant

was estate agent haus until 2023. 23

No 101: Vacant

Used to be aurelia Chinese takeaway, operating for 30 years. Closed during Covid in 2021.

No 103: Vacant

was topps tiles from 2015-2021.

No 113: Randalls

one of London’s most famous butchers, championed by both nigella Lawson and Jamie oliver. It opened in 1988 and is now owned by roberto Barcellona and his partner, Lauren Clark. ‘My business is down 40 per cent compared with two years ago,’ says Barcellona. ‘I had ten employees, which we had to cut to six and now we’re just three. I am very worried.’

For Clark, the real headache is dealing with all the traffic tickets her suppliers have received.

In theory, anyone visiting can be logged on to a smartphone app, giving them permission to drive down certain streets. But she shows me a wad of 60 penalty charge notices, each one for £130, from just three months.

‘we have suppliers coming as early as 4am. they hand us these fines and ask us to sort it out. It’s a lot of stress.’

No 115: Vacant

was one one Five, a womenswear boutique between 2013 and 2018, owned by pippa ellis & Caroline Bamsey. they closed before any traffic measures asures were introduced and complained as far back as 2015 about how difficult the climate was for independen­t retailers.

By 2018, clothing bought online amounted to 23 per cent of all fashion sales in the UK. that figure is now 41 per cent, according to market research firm Kantar.

No 106: Vacant

UntIL recently it was angell services, a bedding, carpets, lighting, furniture and flooring shop that had been here since 1964.

No 136: Set to be vacant

thIs is still technicall­y occupied by trade Carpet, a specialist flooring company, but it is closed. ‘we could open, but no one comes any more. people just can’t get down the road,’ says terry Kirby, the owner, who intends to move out properly in a few months. he has a wimbledon branch to which he now directs customers.

‘when we opened this branch in 2016, it was good business. we were making about £600,000 in annual turnover. and it has dropped to £300,000.’ he says turnover at the wimbledon branch has not fallen — proof, he adds, that it is the local traffic rather than cost of living causing problems.

he says he’d love to see fewer cars

on the road, but people spending ‘£8,000 to £15,000 on replacing the floor in their home don’t come on a bicycle or public transport’.

No 148: Vacant

EUrO Floors London was the tenant from 2016 to 2023. the firm, which supplies wooden floors, now operates from its surrey showroom.

No 150: Vacant

PrEViOUsLY smartec Home solutions, supplying bathrooms and boilers.

No 166: Vacant

Was the showroom of Nina Burgess, a leading carpet and rug designer, from 2010 until last year. she has now moved to a smaller studio half a mile away.

No 176: Vacant

UNtiL last year this had been circus circus, a party supplies shop which opened in 1985. the retailer is no longer in business.

No 180: Fulham Valeting

MOHaMMED sEDDiQi has run this dry cleaner’s since 2017. ‘Before covid, it was much better. Now, it’s Ok,’ he says.

the number of people working from home is having an effect — fewer people need clean suits and shirts. traffic is a problem, he adds, causing pollution on the main road. ‘We used to clean our windows twice a month, now it is every week. i’ve told the council. it’s all very well having clean side roads, but what about Wandsworth Bridge road? What about the businesses here?’

No 184: Il Pagliaccio

aN itaLiaN restaurant, known to locals fondly as ‘Paggs’. Opened in 1992 by teo catino, it used to do 20 to 30 covers at lunch. But the closure of shops and design showrooms has had an effect.

‘ i lost 90 per cent of lunch business,’ he says. ‘Now, i do next to nothing.’ the restaurant used to be open seven days a week, but now it is closed on Monday all day and tuesday for lunch.

isn’t the cost- of-living crisis a bigger factor than the traffic? catino admits his mortgage has gone up £3,000 a month and his electricit­y has shot up fivefold to £100,000 a year. ‘Yes, it’s having an impact. We’ve had to put up our prices.’ a basic margherita pizza has increased from £9 to £11.

in a good week the restaurant used to turn over £27,000. Now, it is half that. ‘i am pumping in money now. We are not making any money. i’d be happy if i was breaking even,’ says catino. He insists the traffic is deterring many customers. He hands out vouchers for free pizzas to encourage people to eat there.

No 190: Vacant

FrOM 2019 to 2023 it was Motte, an interior design business.

No 192: Vacant

Was kkot, a floral designer.

No 194: Vacant

NOW empty and a forlorn site, this has had a succession of restaurant­s in the past decade. Most recently it was Fenn restaurant, before that Harlequin, before that the Delizzia pizza restaurant, and in 2012 it was Mina tandoori.

the owners of Fenn cited a shortage of staff as the reason why they closed it a year ago. they have opened a successful upmarket restaurant, Nest, in shoreditch, East London.

No 196: Pietra Wood & Stone

FELiX WOOD is the sales and marketing director of this flooring company. He says it is not realistic for his customers to cycle or take public transport.

‘Our display panels, which we regularly lend out to our clients, are big and can weigh 20kg or more, so the only option is to visit by car. But our clients are now afraid to drive to our shop in fear of getting fined. those that aren’t deterred by being fined are dissuaded by the mile-long car park that has become Wandsworth Bridge road.’

the council should invest more money in local businesses rather than on ‘putting up banners with meaningles­s slogans on lampposts’, he says, referring to the ‘ spend local . . . Help your community grow’ posters that run down the road.

No 314: London Plastercra­ft

tracEY MckEEVEr, 57, who is owner Mark’s sister and helps run the business, says: ‘People don’t come here any more because they can’t. Walk-in customers have fallen by 70 to 80 per cent. there used to be a steady flow.’

the company makes traditiona­l architectu­ral cornicing, ceiling roses and fireplaces. ‘the council did offer us two parking spaces for customers, which are by Fulham Broadway station. that’s a mile away!’ she says with exasperati­on, pointing out cornicings that come in 9ft lengths. ‘the whole dynamics of the street have changed. it’s so depressing.’

she adds that she has osteoarthr­itis and is waiting for a knee replacemen­t, meaning she can’t — as some clean-air campaigner­s would like — cycle to work. she takes the bus the 1.6 miles home. ‘it used to take me 15 minutes, now it can take as much as an hour and 20 minutes.’

No 297: Vacant

EMPtY since 2016, when it was a tiles DiY showroom.

No 328: Vacant

saiD GOMMari opened his Habibi Moroccan tiles and interiors shop in 2008. ‘it was ideal,’ he says of the area that was full of interiors shops. ‘But every day i saw shops closing.’ He says the passing trade dried up even before the new clean-air measures.

‘a lot of people would ask, “Do you have parking?” and we didn’t.’ the other issue was his rent, which rose from £12,000 a year to £20,000 a year. He shut the shop in 2020 during covid and moved to Harlesden, North-West London. ‘the rent is cheaper up here. and customers can park,’ he says.

He also now does about 70 per cent of his business over the internet. ‘if it wasn’t for the storage, you could run your business from your front room,’ he says, explaining why many fellow interior design shops are leaving the High street.

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Feeling empty: Wandsworth Bridge Road in South-West London and, above left, designer er Allison Rodger and, right, Roberto Barcellona na
Feeling empty: Wandsworth Bridge Road in South-West London and, above left, designer er Allison Rodger and, right, Roberto Barcellona na
 ?? S DAVIES/   Pictures: ??
S DAVIES/ Pictures:
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom