Maltby Street Market
Maltby Street Market is a weekly street-food and provisions market in Bermondsey, southeast London, England. The market is located on a street of the same name near Tower Bridge in the old Horselydown parish of Bermondsey.
As a riparian borough adjacent to Shad Thames and the London Docks Bermondsey has had a long heritage of involvement in the merchant marine and allied trades. The now enclosed River Neckinger passes a few yards from the southern end of the market walk where a diverted conduit of the river is remembered in the name of Millstream road[1]. Maltby Street itself was the approximate site of a ropewalk belonging to Robert Rich and the name has carried over, in the name of the market yard, to the present day.
Local area
The area around Maltby street has historically been constituted of a mixture of workers housing, light industrial units, warehouses and small manufactories and was the traditional location of leather tanneries and rope walks for the making of rigging and cable for shipping in the age of sail. Within half a mile of Maltby Street Market there are a number of built relics of London's industrial heritage. These include Bevington & Sons Neckinger Mills, the Sarsons vinegar factory of 1814, The Leathersellers College of 1909, Hepburn and Gale's tannery complex, the Alaska buildings and the Anchor Brewery at Tower Bridge among many others[2].
The railway arches which run the length of the market were built between 1836 and 1839 for the London and Greenwich Railway, the capital's first steam railway and the earliest elevated railway in the world[3]. The line still carries Southeastern trains at regular intervals From London Bridge to Greenwich and the wider South East[4].
After the removal of the Islington's Caledonian Market to Bermondsey Square in 1950 many of the small warehouses and railway arches around Maltby Street were taken up by antiques and furniture dealers[5][6]. Subsequently the rezoning of the area to permit the construction new dwellings has led to the dispersal and replacement of these small warehouses with housing stock and an alteration of the character of the area giving it a mixed-residential neighbourhood feel[7].
The market itself occupies a narrow private yard belonging to LASSCO, a long established salvage and reclamation company specialising in reclaimed floorboards. The space was first offered as a site for the fledgling food market in 2009 as a way of utilising the salvage yard on quiet weekends. The Market now runs the length of the LASSCO yard every weekend with the firm packing away its reclaimed timber and machinery on Friday to make way for the market stalls.[8]
Creation of Maltby Street Market
Maltby Street Market was born in 2009 from a dispute between the Borough Market trustees and traders unhappy with rising rents and a perceived decline in quality at the ancient London Bridge institution[9]. Initially, nine traders moved the mile from Borough High Street to Maltby Street. The market has changed and developed since then and now includes up to 30 traders at any one time with a steady cycle of new traders coming and going as decided by the constituted Market authorities.[10] Many of the original 'rogue traders' who first parted ways with Borough Market have subsequently moved yet further down the railway line to Spa Terminus and created a food production and distribution centre on that site.[11]
The Market is made up of various gourmet street food vendors with an emphasis on diversity and quality. Foods from all over the world are cooked and created fresh on-site and offered up to passing customers. The market has achieved both popular and critical acclaim with large crowds of locals and visitors attending weekly and diverse publications advertising the quality of the food on offer.[12][13][14]
- A busy Saturday at Maltby Street
- Stalls and barrows on Maltby Street
- Fresh and gourmet street food is sold along the market
- Stalls come in a variety of forms and shapes
- Ropewalk gate of Maltby Street Market
- Pastries being sold at Maltby Street
- Fresh street food from around the world is prepared and sold on-site at the market.
- Street food is cooked from behind the market barrows and stalls.
- Fresh juices, beers and cocktails are made up at the Market.
- The street food is served in disposable containers and utensils are provided for customers to use.
Information
The Market is open every Saturday (10am–5pm) and on Sundays (11am–4pm) with certain concessions trading into the evening.[10] The market begins at the Tanner Street end of Maltby Street and extends along a narrow former rope-walk to Millstream Road with stalls either side of the walk and inside the adjacent railway arches. As well as movable stalls and barrows there are three permanent concessions offering food and drink from Wednesday to Sunday and a French bakery oven-side shop selling cakes and pastries throughout the week.
Website
References
- "River Neckinger". Google My Maps. Retrieved 2019-01-16.
- "Bermondsey Industry - Exploring Southwark". www.exploringsouthwark.co.uk. Retrieved 2019-01-16.
- "London and Greenwich Railway". www.gracesguide.co.uk. Retrieved 2019-01-16.
- "Trains to Greenwich | Southeastern". www.southeasternrailway.co.uk. Retrieved 2019-01-16.
- "Bermondsey Market News | Antiques Trade Gazette". www.antiquestradegazette.com. Retrieved 2019-01-16.
- "Bermondsey Square Antiques Market | Shopping in Bermondsey, London". Time Out London. Retrieved 2019-01-16.
- team, London SE1 website. "Tanner Street's Victorian tin box factory to be knocked down". London SE1. Retrieved 2019-01-16.
- "LASSCO Ropewalk, Bermondsey: Under the Arches - LASSCO History". Retrieved 2019-01-16.
- "Rogue traders: How Maltby Street took on Borough Market". Evening Standard. 21 July 2011. Retrieved 15 January 2019.
- "Maltby St Market". Maltby.st. Retrieved 15 January 2019.
- "About | Spa Terminus". Retrieved 2019-01-16.
- "The 10 best street food markets in London". Evening Standard. 17 April 2018. Retrieved 15 January 2019.
- "Maltby Street Market - Shopping in Bermondsey, London". Time Out London. Retrieved 15 January 2019.
- "Subscribe to read". Financial Times. Retrieved 15 January 2019.