Why is London Disappearing?

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  • Опубликовано: 18 ноя 2023
  • / wanderingturnip
    www.buymeacoffee.com/wanderin...
    The 8th episode of the Death of the High Street - LONDON
    This was a place that was always on my list to come explore, but I was really shocked to see how many boarded up shops there were. Even in places like Covent Garden.
    I lived in London and worked in central London in 2015 and 2016, so it was crazy to see how much it has changed since then.
    Thank you to Jacob @citiprintltd7535 for all the ace info from a local with first hand knowledge. Do check out his channel and I will link his website below.
    www.citiprint.co.uk/contact/
    It was also the perfect episode to talk about business rates, and discuss just how expensive these can be. Especially in a capital city such as London which is already insanely expensive, add on heavy business rates and it is no wonder that there are so many empty shops and boarded up places.
    I actually really like London, and if it wasn't so expensive, I would probably still be living there. And if it wasn't so expensive, all these shops would be able to stay open.
    Thank you as always for watching.
    W.T
    #london #abandoned #capital #urban #decay #towns #buildings #fail #city #levellingup

Комментарии • 9 тыс.

  • @haltaylor
    @haltaylor 6 месяцев назад +2174

    There needs to be a rethink on business rates and how to encourage businesses to set up in these spaces.

    • @aspiring...
      @aspiring... 6 месяцев назад +270

      You are right. It's not like people don't want to start bussinnesses but the rates are crippling.
      The conspiracy theorist I me thinks this might be by design.

    • @Alex-cw3rz
      @Alex-cw3rz 6 месяцев назад +69

      Labour have said they will scrap them, which will be very helpful to the high street

    • @Alex-cw3rz
      @Alex-cw3rz 6 месяцев назад +98

      ​@@aspiring... when you realise that business rates are higher in town centres than out of town centres, it doesn't need a conspiracy to realise the groups that will be lobbying the government to keep business rates. From Amazon to Supermarkets, business rates help you out and hinder our high street

    • @adenwellsmith6908
      @adenwellsmith6908 6 месяцев назад +68

      The other issue. Rates are to be paid before you've even made a sale. That's another factor.
      What's also happening, is working from home, and people are not buying in cafes, shops etc. They won't get that back easily
      On the pubs, that's policy. They have decided to destroy pubs.

    • @highlandsprings5752
      @highlandsprings5752 6 месяцев назад +15

      @@aspiring... Just stop thinking and the problems go away lol.

  • @corinneaggar9755
    @corinneaggar9755 5 месяцев назад +1384

    After living in London for 70 years I’ve left because it’s too heart breaking, to watch my beautiful London destroyed because of greedy politicians

    • @User17213
      @User17213 5 месяцев назад

      Greedy, ridiculous politicians have turned Britain into a racist, aggressive, terrible and hateful country.

    • @dalia5378
      @dalia5378 5 месяцев назад +82

      In the USA where I live, our politicians are worse!!

    • @dzirisenior
      @dzirisenior 5 месяцев назад

      The west is in severe decline

    • @alanyosores5642
      @alanyosores5642 5 месяцев назад

      When the doctraines of colonizers pass to a wrong hand, then self destruction is next..because why they want to go other countries that hard to steal while they have easy to steal to their own soil😂😂😂😂

    • @MrSeedi76
      @MrSeedi76 5 месяцев назад +59

      It's not destroyed because of "greedy politicians" but because of property prices. That's called free market.
      Companies buy property because they hope it will become more valuable. Doesn't matter if anyone rents the place.
      What politicians need to do, is to make sure property in the city is used and not just bought for speculation.
      We have the same problem here in Germany, even in smaller towns with less than 100,000 inhabitants.
      The UK of course has also the problem of its citizens deciding to leave the EU for xenophobic reasons. And a pandemic.
      So how's this caused by "greedy politicians"? As bad as they are, they didn't cause this.

  • @NotaCamelReallyImHuman
    @NotaCamelReallyImHuman 6 месяцев назад +3169

    The UK needs SERIOUS economic reform. The laws favouring the rich are killing this country.

    • @thomasmezei3231
      @thomasmezei3231 6 месяцев назад

      It's not only the rich Mike, the UK has had it too good for too long. The time has come for the UK to crash, gone are the days of the commonwealth and stolen prosperity. Time to face the grim reality of being out in the cold with no one for economic support.

    • @tayachting6345
      @tayachting6345 6 месяцев назад +271

      The laws favouring the rich and the lazy and entitled are killing this country.

    • @imranramzan1795
      @imranramzan1795 6 месяцев назад +149

      Working from home, banks closing, online shopping all contributed to closure

    • @hobbes7460
      @hobbes7460 6 месяцев назад +213

      Not just your country, all countries worldwide!

    • @user-vp6cq4sv3d
      @user-vp6cq4sv3d 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@tayachting6345"Lazy and Entitled" Benefits Scroungers? Like the Royal Family?

  • @pauljack3183
    @pauljack3183 3 месяца назад +122

    I lived in London for 15 years...i left when i realized that they were going to make it disappear!!! It started with the music venues, old pubs, shops... Prices for everything went up the stars, insane...i visited two years ago and i couldn't recognise my beautiful London...it s gone...all that's left are memories

    • @lexxlars5762
      @lexxlars5762 12 дней назад +3

      Visited a few years ago , couldn’t be bothered to enjoy , just got on the Gatwick express to airport and left forever to Spain .

    • @TigerBoyX15
      @TigerBoyX15 5 дней назад +2

      I was so lucky to live in London when I did...I weep now..for what has happened..🌹

  • @sashabertold3731
    @sashabertold3731 4 месяца назад +63

    It's just so sad.
    Moved to London in 1999.
    In 2000 I manged to rent a tiny flat in Bayswater next to Paddington & Notting Hill.
    It was so lively, Bars, Clubs, Whiteleys, Cinema, Prime Time, Blockbusters, Tower Records,HMV and so much more, it was buzzing,
    Just vanished.

    • @G-Man78
      @G-Man78 Месяц назад +3

      no chance you could rent there now unless you had 2k a month for a small one bed. I'm assuming in 99 the rent would have been like 600- 800 a month ?

    • @tabithan2978
      @tabithan2978 21 день назад

      Who would want to be in a city of empty boarded up shops, bars, cafes? So sad! Tories have destroyed UK.

    • @monacam9341
      @monacam9341 14 дней назад +4

      I lived in Bayswater too. And remember this Time.was great.Kind Regards from Germany.

    • @TigerBoyX15
      @TigerBoyX15 5 дней назад +2

      Yes Ace times in Bayswater..I was there early 90s..friends lived there ..I lived in Notting Hill...Good Times .. Memories..

    • @tomilan6001
      @tomilan6001 2 дня назад

      west is dissapearing

  • @topaz3468
    @topaz3468 5 месяцев назад +988

    Evidently the destruction of the middle class is in full swing in the UK, just as it is in the states where I am. I was a frequent business traveler to London for 30 years, and can't believe what is happening to these iconic places you are showing on this video. 🥺 Thank you for all of your efforts in filming this situation!

    • @wesleybarton3871
      @wesleybarton3871 5 месяцев назад +38

      Rent control and levy taxes in the billionaires is the only remedy.

    • @claritadeluna6609
      @claritadeluna6609 5 месяцев назад +56

      I recently saw a video coming out of San Francisco where exactly the same situation is happening. This is happening everywhere 😮. Our governments have destroyed our economy and this is the outcome of years of hard work. Everything is collapsing in front of our own eyes.

    • @cretinousswine8234
      @cretinousswine8234 5 месяцев назад +35

      The state has allowed private citizens to become more powerful and influential than the state itself, which represents all people in it.

    • @user-xf5bh5le4q
      @user-xf5bh5le4q 5 месяцев назад

      @@cretinousswine8234
      The state is represented by power elites.
      Today power is in the hands of elites from financiers.
      The success of a financier’s work is determined not by the quantity and quality of products produced, but by the amount of profit received.
      Any effective manager is concerned, first of all, with reducing costs. His headache is not about how to retain the unique engineering staff, but about why he should pay them high salaries when he can outsource this work?
      As financiers captured all the key positions in states, this logic took hold at the government level.
      The fall in industrial production does not hinder GDP growth. The withdrawal of production from the country is not perceived as a weakening of the economy. Bankers' incomes are growing!
      Globalism is the power of bankers, leading the world to the abyss with songs about democracy, freedom and equality. In reality, everything is exactly the opposite. By defending the opportunity to control global financial flows, they will ruin the industry of Europe, incite a bunch of conflicts, and burn the savings of ordinary people.

    •  5 месяцев назад +8

      Camden was on the cusp of being chewed out in 2005, now it's pretty much all tat.

  • @chrisd5964
    @chrisd5964 6 месяцев назад +918

    Astonished by the empty units in the centre of Covent Garden. You can’t just blame online shopping for this, it’s an economy in big trouble.

    • @Anon1370
      @Anon1370 6 месяцев назад +53

      yep the economy is in big trouble alright

    • @brianjones4026
      @brianjones4026 6 месяцев назад +82

      yes it is and we are still shipping them in to live in hotels and all the rest ! What a Nightmare to see your capital city in tatters, dysfunctional policing by rainbow kneeling sorts and Covent Garden dead as a Dodo !!

    • @PeacockRhino
      @PeacockRhino 6 месяцев назад +41

      Too easy for Labour to blame Brexit and the Tories the civil service than to have uncomfortable conversations about how we turn the country around.

    • @Anon1370
      @Anon1370 6 месяцев назад +27

      @@PeacockRhino thats why we need a new government to reform everything the two top partys don't work good.

    • @stevehaddon151
      @stevehaddon151 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@brianjones4026wtf has any of that got to do with exorbitant rents ya tool

  • @rayray117
    @rayray117 2 месяца назад +24

    Going back to central London after this video, I now noticed all the closed shops I never realised before.

  • @SomeoneBeginingWithI
    @SomeoneBeginingWithI 4 дня назад +5

    this is the first piece of media I've seen actually explain what business rates are and how high they are. thank you. The problem makes a lot more sense to me now.

  • @edwardt2417
    @edwardt2417 6 месяцев назад +628

    Ex Londoner here. I left the country 18 years ago, and every so often get nostalgic about moving back. Watching this is so sad, and is probably part of what my friends there are telling me that the country has changed and isn't what it was when I left.

    • @life107familyfitnessboxing8
      @life107familyfitnessboxing8 6 месяцев назад +63

      The UK is finished

    • @squeaker19694
      @squeaker19694 6 месяцев назад +32

      So sad, it had such a lovely culture and beauty.

    • @daMillenialTrucker
      @daMillenialTrucker 6 месяцев назад

      @@life107familyfitnessboxing8 its because they've gone woke, letting in a bunch of radical muslims, telling boys they can be girls, and taxing the hell out of ya'll. im an american and im seeing this, the western governments want us to suffer, there has to be change

    • @stjut
      @stjut 6 месяцев назад +35

      Me too I left in 2005 and got nostalgic about moving back, a case of grass not being so green. What I left is no more.

    • @zakdee2732
      @zakdee2732 5 месяцев назад +13

      Where did you peeps go and what's it like there? I'm trying to find somewhere good to move to.

  • @midgecooper1772
    @midgecooper1772 6 месяцев назад +374

    I remember when I worked at my local council and business owners would ring up because they were struggling/behind with business rates and a senior colleague would say, 'Well it's a luxury to have a business!' What nonsense. Having a business is a risk and it gives local people jobs. There is zero sympathy from local government.

    • @sugipulaboule9
      @sugipulaboule9 6 месяцев назад

      You mean grubbment.
      Pay CASH Everywhere you go, No kard or phone payment whatsoever people, ditch the phones and JUST SAY NOOO.

    • @nataliam9764
      @nataliam9764 6 месяцев назад

      That the Socialist mentality. Disgusting.

    • @zerotoleranceforsataniceli4794
      @zerotoleranceforsataniceli4794 6 месяцев назад

      Your "senior colleagues" were either ignorant or were globalists, who want the destruction of the small man and the small business .
      I hope you have this colleague a piece of your mind before you left

    • @karmatraining
      @karmatraining 6 месяцев назад +7

      Investments always carry risks. What is the alternative? Risk-free investment?

    • @macairhead5137
      @macairhead5137 6 месяцев назад +56

      @@karmatrainingyou entirely missed the point. The point is government greed and sheer ignorance make these problems. These aren’t part of ‘risks’. This is stupidity and ideological twattery by local government.

  • @AwokenEntertainment
    @AwokenEntertainment 4 месяца назад +72

    it's absolutely shocking how many places became like this during covid and still haven't really bounced back yet..

    • @AwesomeHairo
      @AwesomeHairo 2 месяца назад

      Government restrictions*. Not because of a virus with a over 98% survival rate.

    • @firefly88887
      @firefly88887 Месяц назад

      COVID is the biggest con ever! This goes much deeper than the great Covid swindle !

    • @geoffmccaw1497
      @geoffmccaw1497 24 дня назад +1

      yet????

    • @DatBoiOrly
      @DatBoiOrly 15 дней назад +3

      how can they we're in the highest tax percentage since the second world war, just let that sink in we're on the same level when we had food stamps without the food stamps,
      you need a fair amount of capital to start a business & it just isn't possible with how hard we the people are being shafted, most low income earners are spending 60% of their income in taxes alone so most middle class people are paying 80% meaning if they penny pinched 7 lived off fresh air they'll be able to start a new business in 10+ years not to mention the business rates on top of that making most business's impossible to run without a massive loss's, if nothing changes it'll be another 30ish years before we see those stores open again.

    • @lexxlars5762
      @lexxlars5762 12 дней назад

      Plandemic bioweapon cost global economy 60 trillion in losses. Avian Flu Plandemic part 2 incoming. Do not comply

  • @gauloise6442
    @gauloise6442 4 месяца назад +21

    These buildings are all owned by private equity firms with tons of cash, if they rent out at low rents, the property values go down, so it is better for them to have empty shops and keep property values up, then to get the best rent they can.

    • @brucknerian9664
      @brucknerian9664 12 дней назад +1

      How can the property be worth anything at all when they're empty and no one willing to rent the space? Value is zero. Private equity firms keep pretending they're worth something only to keep their shareholders from panicking and to stave off the inevitable bankruptcy proceedings. The CEOs don't want to tarnsih their over-inflated resumes ... there are lots of CEOs resigning because they see the collapse that's looming. Economists have been predicting it for the last coupld of decades. Politicians are only fueling it like never before.

    • @slevinlucky3240
      @slevinlucky3240 4 дня назад

      @@brucknerian9664because buildings usually contain offices as well residential and it’s only retail stores. So if retail is empty but rest is let out at market rate then it’s ok.

  • @theverycreativegan
    @theverycreativegan 5 месяцев назад +383

    I visited Barcelona in March this year and I travelled around the entire city and I didn’t see one large, medium or small independent shop closed. It was completely buzzing with people and business was booming everywhere. It was like Covid had never happened. The difference is in how the country is run and the breaks the business get. Business’s in UK is on its knees because of pure greed. Who benefits?

    • @tigritsa74
      @tigritsa74 5 месяцев назад

      Exactly. Stop illegal immigration and everything will be ok for your own people.

    • @tigritsa74
      @tigritsa74 5 месяцев назад +5

      It’s not the rich who are at fault

    • @darrencavanagh5328
      @darrencavanagh5328 5 месяцев назад +11

      Poor landlords? Please!

    • @brentsrx7
      @brentsrx7 5 месяцев назад

      Yes, greedy beurocracy that creates no value in your society destroyed business and job opportunities for everyone.

    • @robertdaloia1048
      @robertdaloia1048 5 месяцев назад +12

      The NWO...

  • @WeekendsOutsideFL
    @WeekendsOutsideFL 5 месяцев назад +472

    The reason these videos are so good to watch is because many of us have next to nothing in assets, are stuck in low pay jobs, with zero options for upward movement. So when we come online and see that we are not alone in this decay, it is soothing because you don’t feel like it’s your own fault anymore e

    • @midwestlakelife
      @midwestlakelife 5 месяцев назад +55

      This is so true. You are not alone.
      So many of us out here struggling.

    • @etienne8110
      @etienne8110 5 месяцев назад +24

      It can still be your fault if you ate voting tories...
      In a democracy, our condition is the result of the elections... So at some point, most of the people are voting to create this misery.

    • @jimp1646
      @jimp1646 5 месяцев назад

      @@etienne8110 The elections are a two horse race. Both the Tories and Labour have a record of implementing policies that are detrimental to society. It's highly likely Labour will win the next election. Guess what's going to happen to rent prices when Labour forces more private Landlords out of the rental market? People will not be voting for higher rents, but that's what they will get with Labour.

    • @markg3683
      @markg3683 5 месяцев назад +29

      @@etienne8110 It's not only the Tories. Remember that half the rates go directly to the local governments, which in most cities are Labour controlled. The other half is redistributed to councils by the national government. They both waste money like crazy.

    • @etienne8110
      @etienne8110 5 месяцев назад +17

      @@markg3683 except they don t have a say on the rates...
      The ones making the laws are the only ones with real power. And they ve been tories for a few decades....

  • @metinukvisa
    @metinukvisa 3 месяца назад +8

    People don't go to shops as much now because everyone is into online shopping. It's a hassle to travel to the West End, spend money on ULEZ, CC, and parking, and then pay more for stuff that you can get cheaper online without any trouble. During lockdowns, everyone got used to ordering things online. Big companies are letting their employees work from home, and they're turning office buildings into homes and shutting down bank branches. Not as many people are working in central London like before.
    Amazon and Tesco are the big players, selling almost everything you can find in regular shops. Tesco even lets smaller shops, like Vision Express, set up in their buildings. People might not rent DVDs anymore, but they still love watching movies online. That's why shops are closing down, and owners are thinking about new ways to do business.

  • @Caramelle58
    @Caramelle58 3 месяца назад +6

    My last visit to London was in 2003 ….. never going back, I just keep the good memories from the 1980ies and 1990ies

    • @luciatheron1621
      @luciatheron1621 28 дней назад +1

      Same. I lived there for a few years. Last visit was 2003. I still have a soft spot for this city.

  • @styleyK
    @styleyK 6 месяцев назад +590

    Loving this series because you are showing the real face/state of the UK that the majority of us experience on a daily basis (not what our corporate media and government, want to talk about or show the rest of the world).
    You are doing a public service young man, but watch yourself because a certain section of society won't like it.
    Don't let noone hold you back.
    All power to ya 🙏🏿

    • @johnn17golf
      @johnn17golf 6 месяцев назад +10

      Same worldwide, not just London or UK. We need to focu to the real wealth creators - the working forlk who breate the goods and services and are the consumers as well. All this focus on making the corporations and even smaller business happy is not how you build an economy. You build a successful economy from the wealth creators UP.

    • @nkhamoza1
      @nkhamoza1 5 месяцев назад +12

      I'm in Zambia Africa. My Mom and I want to open a shop and we can't believe the cost of the retail rental spaces. We don't understand how anyone can afford it. It's true it's the whole world, that 1% are taking everything. It's alarming!

    • @aluna_m888
      @aluna_m888 5 месяцев назад +1

      So sad 😢 the reality is depressing !!!

    • @kampai71
      @kampai71 5 месяцев назад

      But MacDonald doesn’t seem to have any problem with thriving. Anywhere anytime! Is it true that when Londoners elect city authorities the City of London (the banking district) is excluded??? The City elects its authorities from the banks?!

    • @miamitten1123
      @miamitten1123 5 месяцев назад +2

      Central London (even when buzzing) seemed boring, pretentious, hipster and touristy to me. Notting Hill, Wandsworth, Lambeth even South Croydon, Wallington seemed much better places to hang out.

  • @Mrpjm200
    @Mrpjm200 4 месяца назад +26

    Thanks for putting business rates overlay. Really helps us understand whats going on

  • @richardhoward7503
    @richardhoward7503 3 месяца назад +15

    I grew up in a bustling East End. Markets were everywhere and thriving. I lived overseas for decades and only came back ten years ago. 'My' East End is now just blocks and blocks of soulless flats, many unoccupied. It's heartbreaking.

  • @Rubicon1985
    @Rubicon1985 6 месяцев назад +216

    Useful tip - if you want to see what London looked like previous years you can go on street view and it has a brilliant option under search which says "See more dates" and you can jump back in time

    • @TheBlackManMythLegend
      @TheBlackManMythLegend 5 месяцев назад +8

      thanks mate

    • @estebantia2413
      @estebantia2413 5 месяцев назад +7

      Never knew that ... Thanks for sharing!

    • @sunstardrummer963
      @sunstardrummer963 5 месяцев назад +2

      Yeap.Shocking to see.

    • @rockstar78970
      @rockstar78970 2 месяца назад +4

      for example, the oldest footage is the year 2007/08, those were the golden days of the city, lots of businesses and people walking around, pretty much reasonable prices and looked mostly British, now it's full of immigrants 😕

    • @tomjardine100
      @tomjardine100 6 дней назад +1

      Tories have a lot to answer for

  • @juansantana8448
    @juansantana8448 5 месяцев назад +208

    Welcome to the future. It is not just London, San Francisco, and other cities around the country are suffering the same issue, closed shops, the homeless moving in, graffiti in the windows, well, you all know the rest.

    • @we8608
      @we8608 5 месяцев назад

      The homeless moving in is an oxymoron. Wtf are you talking about?

    • @davianoinglesias5030
      @davianoinglesias5030 5 месяцев назад +18

      The homeless ain't moving in, they've been our neighbours and relatives, they just couldn't afford their rent anymore

    • @huskyboi9847
      @huskyboi9847 5 месяцев назад +1

      In India it's opposite 😂

    • @huskyboi9847
      @huskyboi9847 5 месяцев назад

      Many new futuristic cities are being built in india

    • @IsmaelCRUZ-oy4ph
      @IsmaelCRUZ-oy4ph 5 месяцев назад

      its the big reset they want and need. This isnt a conspiracy, private central banks borrowed money at crazy interest rates and wants all these business and mortgages to fall through. so when the bubble bursts the bankers that get new money first will buy up all the assests cheap.

  • @thecollector5243
    @thecollector5243 4 месяца назад +9

    Lived in Croydon in the very early 2000s.
    Came back recently to visit a friend and thought I was in another country entirely... I held on fast to my purse and don't plan to go there again any time soon.

    • @lexxlars5762
      @lexxlars5762 12 дней назад

      Went to boarding school in Croydon , 80s . Tragic

  • @2202issac
    @2202issac Месяц назад +4

    I lived in Acton W3 from 87 to 98 ….go back regularly…. Breaks my heart to see the decline …Great informative video 👍

  • @qTnationX
    @qTnationX 5 месяцев назад +143

    After having my restaurant/cafe since 1991 (passed down from my father) based in zone 2 of London i will unfortunately be closing the doors for the first time in January and moving on. The UK does not support small businesses and bigger businesses too it always seems they are against us when we provide so much for the community its sad, they charge us for every little thing, tv license, bin collection, and council tax the list goes on lets not forget the rise in stock (food) prices, buying products you just can not make profit anymore!! All the council seems to care about is building flats and houses to gain more profit, every little space they find the council goes ahead and builds flats🤦🏻‍♂️ THE UK is finished!

    • @donkeydan5996
      @donkeydan5996 5 месяцев назад +9

      Same over here in the states , so sorry you have to close up. I had a restaurant 15 years ago and it was hard then , can’t imagine now

    • @Mrc172
      @Mrc172 5 месяцев назад +6

      TV license leaves me shaking my head. Why the hell should you need a license to watch TV. I live in Australia and like the U.K we used to have them. When we elected a Labour government in the early 70s (the first since 1949) the license was abolished in 1974.

    • @oceania68
      @oceania68 5 месяцев назад +5

      @@Mrc172 Abolished 18 September 1974, to be closer to the date, by the Whitlam Government. The Fraser Government in 1975 tried to reintroduce the licensing but thankfully failed due to the huge backlash.

    • @MeiinUK
      @MeiinUK Месяц назад +2

      Whereabouts are you in zone 2 ? I hope you won't give up so easily without a fight first.. good producers like Unilever are dominating the entire globe. The food companies like Compass are also to blame too. I hope you won't actually give up just yet... Not just yet. Cos I hate some of the imported food items etc.... as they can often be contaminated and we won't know ?....

  • @malcolmmcphee2582
    @malcolmmcphee2582 6 месяцев назад +537

    I am a yorkshire man, that worked in London. I know the areas you walked fairly well. Covent garden used to be ramed with people.
    Shops and restaurants and pubs and bars.
    This is not a slowing down of the economy. It's a fully planned destruction of our society, they destroying the UK to its death. I live in thailand now for the past four years. I returned to England on the 2nd of this month, after not returned in that time. I flew back to Bangkok after only 5 days. The country is in such a dark way these days. So many bars, restaurants, and pubs that used to be so busy. Now many only open wednesday to sunday. Many not even open week day lunch times. Some only open friday to sunday evenings only. I witnessed big restaurant bars at 1pm, with as many as only 3 customers in. I just had to get out again. Unfortunately! just see how much destruction next year will bring. By the way i was in Preston Lancashire. England the Uk, European countries, the U. S. The Whole world is being destroyed.

    • @UnimportantAcc
      @UnimportantAcc 6 месяцев назад +4

      Out of interest, do you work in Thailand? I've been looking to emigrate to Asia, but it is not easy as my qualifications would not recognised out there!

    • @GrantHarri
      @GrantHarri 6 месяцев назад +26

      100 percent agree brother I moved to Mexico 2 years ago I cannot watch and be around what’s going down in the uk❤

    • @marktyler3381
      @marktyler3381 6 месяцев назад +18

      Harder when you're from London.

    • @malcolmmcphee2582
      @malcolmmcphee2582 6 месяцев назад +12

      @@UnimportantAcc It is not easy to work in Thailand. You can only do certain jobs.

    • @llanieliowe794
      @llanieliowe794 6 месяцев назад +13

      haha its shit in Bangkok for women though, so I still love the uk even if its been facing troublers since covid and the tories

  • @ayiorgos
    @ayiorgos 4 месяца назад +3

    Thank you for posting this!
    Very well done!

  • @amazingshaunyes
    @amazingshaunyes 3 месяца назад +4

    Good work. Highlighting this is essential.

  • @marie-ctunnicliff513
    @marie-ctunnicliff513 5 месяцев назад +179

    This is just heart breaking, I worked in London in the 60s - it used to be such a vibrant place , I'm so glad that I experienced it how it used to be! I shall never go to London again, but live with my memories.

    • @TheMisanthropyOne
      @TheMisanthropyOne 5 месяцев назад +6

      Did you go UFO club and saw Pink Floyd with Syd Barrett? Please say yes.

    • @marie-ctunnicliff513
      @marie-ctunnicliff513 5 месяцев назад

      Regrettably not! If only...@@TheMisanthropyOne

    • @Objectified
      @Objectified 5 месяцев назад +10

      It's happening in Seattle and SF because of the mass shoplifting and the refusal of the cities to prosecute a variety of crimes, or to clean up the homeless encampments they allow to occupy large areas. When key stores like Targets and grocery stores close it massively reduces the foot traffic that helped keep nearby stores alive, and they eventually close.

    • @Andromeda_CT86
      @Andromeda_CT86 5 месяцев назад

      I have the best memories of my last 30 years visiting London frequently. Its still incredibly vibrant. It's my favourite city, especially in the summer.

    • @HenryJoy
      @HenryJoy 5 месяцев назад +2

      I managed betting shops in Denmark St.Oxford St..all over Soho.
      Brilliant back then

  • @timcastle1844
    @timcastle1844 5 месяцев назад +127

    Congratulations. It's about time someone talked about the cost of rentals for shops. Most of the conversation concerns, "The cost of wages" but the costs of doing business, outside of wages, is ignored.

    • @thehammer9599
      @thehammer9599 4 месяца назад

      Who would have thought that
      -closing down the economy for two years
      -paying people to sit on their arse
      -treating people like taxable commodities
      -inviting the 3rd world to prop up pensions
      … would have fkd the nation?

  • @mdkutzler8495
    @mdkutzler8495 4 месяца назад +27

    Hey, I am just a Yank from the state of Wisconsin in the USA but after watching this presentation I will say that former PM, Liz Truss may have been onto something when she suggested lowering taxes and business rates to spur the economy. As I recall she was laughed out of office as Thatcher-lite. Downing Street has to come up with a plan to get investment flowing again and no easier way than to loweri taxes. It sounds oxymoronic but indeed lower taxes increases economic output thereby increasing tax revenue. New subscriber here and in time a London visitor. Jolly Good!

    • @ChatGPT1111
      @ChatGPT1111 Месяц назад

      Looks like you guys are going to continue your decline. Wisconsin is the only swing state where Trump isn't leading by a substantial margin. Keep voting for this $hit and see what happens.

    • @denis-mf3cx
      @denis-mf3cx 26 дней назад

      She crashed the economy with her crass economic policies, 47 days wipe out billions upon billions from the economy. She and her fucking insane advisers from think tanks should be jailed for life!

    • @anialiki
      @anialiki 20 дней назад

      She wasn't on to anything, she crashed the economy which is still costing us all to this day, mortgages shot through the roof, we are happy for her to stay in the states. If you want to see the benefit of higher taxes in the right places please go visit denmark and norway where the quality of life is 10 times better than the u.k.

    • @GYI5U
      @GYI5U 8 дней назад

      The problem is not lack of investment because of taxes, its because the corporate owners of these empty lots literally can't afford to lower their rent...because if they do their valuations go down and the loans they took using these spots as collateral will default.

  • @thomasscottwilliams6672
    @thomasscottwilliams6672 4 месяца назад +6

    Thank you for posting and explaining the business rates issue, I visit London 8 to 10 times a year and the pretty picture boards fooled me into thinking that an exciting new store was coming or older one was being refurbished. I am deeply saddened by this, my local community in wales has suffered enormously with so many stores boarded up, online is great but I love the person to person interaction with the sales rep that knows you. It seems like a different era.

  • @laurence2824
    @laurence2824 6 месяцев назад +252

    It brought a lump to my throat seeing what the West End is becoming. I used to work in Soho during the '80s and '90s. There was a lovely local community there with a fishmonger, greengrocers and butchers' shops. Plenty of lovely little Italian places too where you could grab a cannelloni and an espresso for a couple of quid. All that is gone now, taken over by post-production companies and editing suites. It's amazing to think that if you were a bit skint back then, and needed to rent a pad, Soho was considered cheap and cheerful. I'm so glad I experienced London in its gorgeous, slightly tatty, prime, while it still had a heart. Foreign oligarchs and multimillionaires seem to have transformed it into something unrecognisable.

    • @ZombieSexmachine
      @ZombieSexmachine 6 месяцев назад

      The lockdowns and high taxes are what's shutting them down. So government did it.

    • @fungus_am0nguz644
      @fungus_am0nguz644 5 месяцев назад +12

      Dude ive been going to London since the late 90s and i try to go every year to visit friends there. I went this year '23 after my last time there in 2019 and couldnt believe how much it had changed. Like is different when you visit a city and you go there to party, go to restaurants, shop a bit, go sightseeing, its all fun. This last time i went it felt depressing, in SoHo blocks and blocks of boarded up closed shops, in fkn SoHo and Covent Garden, i was like wtf, there's soooo many of them. Of course rent prices are insane these days but a lot of big cities are the same but dude what a depressing site it was seeing all those prime places boarded up

    • @tenabarnes3269
      @tenabarnes3269 5 месяцев назад +14

      Look up the cities of Seattle Washington, Portland Oregon, Los Angeles , Oakland, Sandiego, and Sanfrancisco, California, these places look the same and worse than London, there are many other left leaning larger cities and states that are on their way there. The problem is spreading coast to coast. Also look up Toronto , Canada, Vancouver, Canada, Perth and Sydney, Australia, and cities in Germany, Brazil. This same agenda is happening all over the world and is by design, this plan is the masterminds of the World Economic Forum in action and all of the current government leaders have been bought and are owned.

    • @janpacana6293
      @janpacana6293 5 месяцев назад +8

      ​@@tenabarnes3269 Wrong. 71 % of the USA's economy are in Democrat cities, counties and states.
      Republican states.
      9 of the 10 poorest states
      10 of the 10 states with the lowest monthly salary
      Lowest in education,
      Lowest in healthcare

    • @Objectified
      @Objectified 5 месяцев назад

      @@janpacana6293Thank you for demonstrating your ability to be duped by statistics without context. You undoubtedly believe the "blue states pay for red states" derp as well despite the fact that it's not only been disproven, it's been shown that the return on federal tax dollars in those states tends to be superior. "Poorest" states? Arkansas' poverty rate is 16%. California's poverty rate is 12.5%. New York's poverty rate is 13.6%. If you want to hang your hat on such relatively small differences, that's on you - especially when those differences in those southern red states are largely due to the high number of people living in rural areas. You want to compare the poverty rate of blue-state inner cities with rural areas? As of 2023, red states comprise about 40% of the U.S. GDP with 46% of its population. Lower healthcare goes hand in hand with poverty rates. You can get world-class healthcare in any U.S. state and in most larger U.S. cities. The difference is in the affordability of health care, which disproportionately harms the poor. Guess which racial cohort is far and away the largest group of poor?

  • @Abraham_Tsfaye
    @Abraham_Tsfaye 4 месяца назад +226

    When I was in UK. I saw empty boarded up streets under a constant grey sky, litter everywhere.
    Homeless people sleeping in doorways. A women with cat whiskers makeup casually walking into Tesco with her pajamas. Opioid addicts out of their mind and women so drunk they urinated on the streets.
    It's a sad declined country.

    • @margaretbgregory1524
      @margaretbgregory1524 4 месяца назад +6

      London is not a country, it’s a city in the UK

    • @BSworldX
      @BSworldX 3 месяца назад +24

      Everywhere in the UK same crap

    • @tomwilliams7391
      @tomwilliams7391 3 месяца назад +5

      It feels like developing, rather than developed sometimes, I live in Plymouth and parts feel almost third world

    • @SuperSbuk
      @SuperSbuk 3 месяца назад

      ​@tomwilliams7391 that's because of the primitive 3rd world infestation that has migrated and overwhelmed the western world

    • @redman6790
      @redman6790 3 месяца назад +6

      @@margaretbgregory1524 To be fair, its essentially a city-state. London is where all the wealth, politics and concentration is. So any crisis in London is just merely exacerbated across the rest of the country.

  • @conjumonblue6450
    @conjumonblue6450 4 месяца назад +3

    I lived outside London back in the 1980s. I'd take a train into the city on the weekend. One thing that always struck me was the crowds, people were everywhere. Covent Garden had lots of high-end stores and lots of restaurants to choose from. Watching this video was like seeing a ghost town. So sad...

  • @patrickwebb1987
    @patrickwebb1987 4 месяца назад +7

    I lived in London from 2011 -2013 and I can honestly say that that is a shadow of what I remember it to be. Saddening to see. One day the people will take it back.

  • @JasRoss
    @JasRoss 5 месяцев назад +58

    It is not only crushing business owners, but consumers as well. Visited a friend in London a couple weeks back and paying nearly 8 pound a pint. Who has the money for a night out? Not the rare night out, but what we used to do in the 2000s. Finish work, meet at the local with friends, grab a bite to eat. We did this multiple times a week without breaking the bank. I earn considerably more now than back then, but I would never be able to afford that social life today. Kills business, kills consumers, and most importantly kills communities.

    • @frankiesayrelax100
      @frankiesayrelax100 5 месяцев назад

      the Globalists have destroyed "Nights Out" and Bar Culture Everywhere. Even when you can afford it, everyone else is hesitating to just go out spontaneously and socialize.

    • @PORRRIDGE_GUN
      @PORRRIDGE_GUN 5 месяцев назад +4

      Yet the pub trade publicity is telling us the average price of a pint in London is £4.30. If that's true, then JD Wethespoons is doing a lot of heavy lifting. But even their pubs are only as half as busy as they were before the pandemic.

    • @tomjardine100
      @tomjardine100 6 дней назад

      @@PORRRIDGE_GUNSpoons always do well and it's no suprise. Only pub I would go to in London

  • @AC-id5ow
    @AC-id5ow 6 месяцев назад +217

    Moved to London in 2004. Felt like a big city. Exciting. Glamorous people. Opportunities galore. New shops popping up. Now the demographics have changed massively and I think it’s reflected in the city. Moved back north a year ago. It’s great up here. Lots of independent local businesses. Butchers selling local meet. Farm shops. Antique shops. Welcoming pubs. Friendly people you can relate to. Wouldn’t want to move to London now. Hasn’t the same feeling as before. Virgin megastore. Border book shop. All gone.

    • @neurocidesakiwi
      @neurocidesakiwi 6 месяцев назад +2

      Not enough English people, thats the real issue.

    • @freedomisslavery6840
      @freedomisslavery6840 6 месяцев назад

      Import the third world, become the third world. It's a universal fact.

    • @jamesmason8436
      @jamesmason8436 6 месяцев назад +2

      It's still all of those things ffs

    • @VestaJ17
      @VestaJ17 6 месяцев назад +38

      @@jamesmason8436its nothing like 2004 what are you talking about

    • @chrissafe3342
      @chrissafe3342 6 месяцев назад +75

      Let's get real there are too many blacks and Muslims. London is Londonstan , islamic capital of Europe

  • @monicacampbell6242
    @monicacampbell6242 Месяц назад +2

    Great video thanks.

  • @sangio_davese
    @sangio_davese 4 месяца назад +1

    Great series from the town of my birth. Reminds me of another good series from where I call home now-San Francisco Bay Area and a dude named Metal Leo. Your tour makes some of the places I used to know appear almost unrecognizable.

  • @benjaminmoogk3531
    @benjaminmoogk3531 6 месяцев назад +241

    Like many problems, this isn’t limited to the UK. A visit to New York City or Paris shows the same problem. Property tax rates are tied to property values, but property values have become detached from their income potential. In part, the few, who are extremely wealthy, living in the centre do not shop there. The number of middle income earners who commute into and spend their wages in the centre has also fallen.

    • @morghetoofun2979
      @morghetoofun2979 5 месяцев назад +13

      Global nightmare caused by Global...

    • @marilynvallance
      @marilynvallance 5 месяцев назад +5

      Just accept Brexit is the main cause. It’s not happening in Madrid.

    • @reginamemoriesforever-vc8ql
      @reginamemoriesforever-vc8ql 5 месяцев назад

      Enjoy your massive EXPENSIVE government which sustains itself with ridiculously high taxes and a manipulated inflated currency. Plus, your a-cultural multiculturalism that is not attractive at all and destroys the bonds between people and dilutes the character of your country

    • @yfomenko
      @yfomenko 5 месяцев назад +4

      Not in Moscow. Some western companies left, but new ones came. Everything is working fine.

    • @shyft09
      @shyft09 5 месяцев назад +14

      Paris seems fine to me (London is all freehold owned by a few landlords, that's the difference IMO)
      Ever wonder why the landlords of those empty properties in London don't just reduce the rent until they find someone? Because that's only 5% of their inventory, They care about the inflated rents they are forcing all their other clients to pay

  • @stellamaxwell777
    @stellamaxwell777 6 месяцев назад +68

    As an American this level of tax is unseemly. Don’t understand how they expect to keep an economy going when it doesn’t even seem like you can take 50% home as profit. Rent, 50% tax, and VAT? Insanity

    • @eightsprites
      @eightsprites 6 месяцев назад +14

      I live in Sweden, payed high taxes all my life. Now I need a smaller operation, the queue for it is over a year. Really question what the tax was/is used for.

    • @misst.e.a.187
      @misst.e.a.187 6 месяцев назад

      They don't want the economy to thrive, but to grind it down into a globalist mush

    • @karmatraining
      @karmatraining 6 месяцев назад +1

      The tax is probably a lot less than the rent you pay. They would have to sell $20 cups of tea to afford it long term.

    • @poiujnbvcxdswq
      @poiujnbvcxdswq 6 месяцев назад +13

      As an American you as per usual don`t have a clue what you are on about. Once you take into account federal and state taxes and the various property taxes..and the things covered by the UK taxes that are additional expenses in the US such as even basic medical cover, the US tax rate is about the same. For example I own two properties one in the UK and one in the US.The total taxes on it in the UK is $1,200 a year, roughly the same property in the US is $9,000 just from the state, plus another $500 from various county and city ordinances. Lets not pretend the US is a low tax place. The US property tax alone is roughly the same as the total tax i pay on all my income and assets in the UK.

    • @starsandnightvision
      @starsandnightvision 6 месяцев назад

      @@eightsprites Tax is used for leftoid hobbies.

  • @noonesflower
    @noonesflower 4 месяца назад +1

    Wow. That's insane. Thanks for reporting.

  • @KJ-gc8oq
    @KJ-gc8oq 3 месяца назад +2

    Really interesting and informative video, whilst at the same time, sad and depressing. I lived (inner) and worked (central) in London from 83 to 93 (19yo to 29yo), we could afford our rent and bills, an active social life, shopping and travel. They were good times, we were so lucky to have lived our youth in that era.

  • @SilliusSodus
    @SilliusSodus 6 месяцев назад +299

    The commodification of housing has shafted the working man/woman into oblivion. Last time you could actually buy a house was in the 90’s. Only problem was the wages were lousy too.

    • @triptwo425
      @triptwo425 6 месяцев назад

      that would make my piss boil. I would sack her@@UberFoX

    • @MamaRebelle
      @MamaRebelle 6 месяцев назад +25

      True, my house was £48,000 in the 90s a standard Victorian terrace, after separating I could afford the mortgage as a single mother. ( although I’ll be paying till I’m 70) The equivalent now would be over £200,000 for a young couple. My daughter and partner have a decent income but will not be able to get on the housing market without a lottery win

    • @johnross2924
      @johnross2924 6 месяцев назад +9

      35 grand for my first house in 1989

    • @MamaRebelle
      @MamaRebelle 6 месяцев назад +12

      @@LotharFriedrichFreiherrvon I’m housebound disabled so I live online and I’m happy 😃

    • @johnross2924
      @johnross2924 6 месяцев назад +22

      @@LotharFriedrichFreiherrvon I own nothing now and Im as miserable as f*ck. Not sure where they get the "we will be happy" bit from 😂

  • @lowwastehighmelanin
    @lowwastehighmelanin 5 месяцев назад +32

    This is frightening. Looks like San Francisco. The largest retail center in the city in the heart of downtown is closing and one of the major department stores doesn't exist anywhere else in the state... Worrying that this is happening globally.

    • @lesliewarnell5172
      @lesliewarnell5172 5 месяцев назад

      The reasons store's are closing in the states are different. People are stealing loads of merch, causingshops to close. Online businesses like Amazon is undercutting prices, causing brick-and-mortar shops to close, and the increase of the homeless population intimidates shoppers. The shops here in the states are not closing because of no rent caps.

  • @terryansell6641
    @terryansell6641 Месяц назад +1

    So sad to see Covent Garden like that we had the most amazing Italian meal in that place only five years ago great video thanks for sharing from New Zealand

  • @maisondesalbertins
    @maisondesalbertins 15 дней назад

    I appreciate you taking the time to make a video on that topic. It's disheartening to see small stores that my friends and I frequent close down unexpectedly, leaving us surprised and disappointed. It's sad to see familiar places disappear. Nowadays, I only spend money on necessities like food, rent, bills, and transportation, and I don't go out as much as I used to or shop for futilities. Even my favourite cinema on King's Road shut down, which was a real shame. I'm considering leaving the country because my rent has skyrocketed, and the same goes for my bills, making it increasingly difficult to make ends meet on my current salary. It's hard to believe that just 20 years ago, London was a lively and bustling city full of energy and excitement. Unfortunately, those days seem long gone, and now it feels like a deserted ghost town. Thank you, I enjoyed watching your video.

  • @mikedennington8856
    @mikedennington8856 6 месяцев назад +251

    It is the same all over the world, Vancouver, Toronto, Sydney, Melbourne, Berlin, Rome. It seems to be a cultural shift toward online and lack of good politicians in the area with any ideas on what to do. A closed shop produces zero rates, zero tax and hence the tax burden increases on the other shops, a stupid spiral of devastation.

    • @ladylaois8184
      @ladylaois8184 6 месяцев назад +54

      NWO in full swing

    • @gmc9451
      @gmc9451 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@ladylaois8184judging by the comments on here people still don't get what's going on. Spot on re NWO.

    • @Scientist538
      @Scientist538 6 месяцев назад

      Productivity heads to zero when both parents have to work as there is no time for women to make a home and raise a family and not enough wages for men to work and provide as the breadwinners, it's causing a demographic crisis and no amount of native soft genocide/replacement migration will solve it, the real solution comes out of nationalist left wing and pro-native social policy combined with right wing neoliberal regulation, and economic freedom reforms but both the leftists and right wing politicians in power in the west are seemingly all globalist and anti-nationalist.

    • @llanieliowe794
      @llanieliowe794 6 месяцев назад +20

      Yh its not just a uk problem

    • @Pyjamarama11
      @Pyjamarama11 6 месяцев назад

      This is what happens when people vote for their politicians based on what's between their legs, instead of what's between their ears

  • @carylgibbs6094
    @carylgibbs6094 6 месяцев назад +133

    This might be the saddest video I’ve EVER seen. I love London and although I haven’t been able to spend as much time there since 2019, I had no idea it was that bad! My heart breaks for the City and this country that it is this bad.

  • @mermaidzombie23
    @mermaidzombie23 Месяц назад +2

    I'm originally from London and this is the first i'm seeing of London since i last went home in early 2021 and i'm shocked by covent garden.
    I'm shocked by a lot of the uk and the rapid changes that i've seen - everywhere seems to be losing it's life and soul. I live in Leeds now and the same is happening here. Gone are the days !

  • @capture_to_collage
    @capture_to_collage 6 месяцев назад +72

    This issue has a huge impact on Mental Health all adding to the growing problem of people feeling lonely & isolated. Visting Cities or your local High Street either alone or with family/friends tended to lift people's spirits in a variety of positive ways but the loss of these precincts results in people losing that community engagement along with current/future employment.

    • @GT380man
      @GT380man 6 месяцев назад +4

      Agreed, I no longer even visit high streets, as the war is long lost. It’s way too depressing watching injured people limping around after nearly four years pro bono warning people about jabs. Mugs.

    • @GingerPeacenik
      @GingerPeacenik 5 месяцев назад +2

      Nothing has changed much here in Florida, for what it's worth. Gee, what did we do differently here....?🤔

    • @Marirenee0313
      @Marirenee0313 5 месяцев назад +3

      Yes it does people need third spaces so they can get out, and get away from being on their phone and being online all day.

    • @user-lp8fe8nn2j
      @user-lp8fe8nn2j 5 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@GingerPeacenikprices in Florida supermarkets are hell crazy

  • @nmart1n
    @nmart1n 6 месяцев назад +251

    For The Strand and Covent Garden, you can tell this is down to reduced tourism and massive rent and rate hikes. I used to visit The Tea House. Seeing it closed made me a bit sad.
    The government needs to take responsibility for the fact that they have scared people away from coming here for tourism or to live. They have also set no caps on rent. Landlords are charging huge amounts for rent and councils for rates. Getting people to go back to work in the centre will make a small difference but not much. Most people can’t afford the fares anymore or to buy things when they’re there.

    • @bluceree7312
      @bluceree7312 5 месяцев назад +16

      Exactly. Choose a pub, any pub, in any area, and it would be clear to see that in 2019 on a Wednesday afternoon the chances are it would be busy with after work office people getting a pint or two before taking the train home. Now they all work from home and your chosen pub is probably empty.

    • @Robert-A-R
      @Robert-A-R 5 месяцев назад +7

      I agree with the majority of what you’re saying - but net migration into Britain last year was 745,000, so they’re not really being frightened off coming to live here.

    • @IKTGWIW
      @IKTGWIW 5 месяцев назад +3

      @@bluceree7312 So, work from home results in drink at home which, for some, could mean drink at work at home🤠

    • @nmart1n
      @nmart1n 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@Robert-A-R You would have to believe those numbers were real, plus they don’t take into consideration or ever talk about people leaving. I was really thinking about people who might move for work and/or with a view to buying property and settling.

    • @Robert-A-R
      @Robert-A-R 5 месяцев назад +4

      @@nmart1n apparently that 745,000 figure is NET migration into Britain - they have taken into account the number of people who have left

  • @driftertravels928
    @driftertravels928 3 месяца назад

    Thanks for the video. I lived in London for almost 20 years, went to uni there then found a job and eventually left, also because it became too expensive. Went back quickly a few months ago for the first time in around 15 years and was shocked about how different it was, especially the boarded up shops, many of which I use to go to. The Astoria, where I use to watch gigs in the evenings after lectures, and Charing Cross Road are all the same boring and soulless glass buildings now. Even if I had the money I don't think I would go back there.

  • @mikewilson4847
    @mikewilson4847 4 месяца назад +1

    Excellent. Thank you.

  • @peterc.1618
    @peterc.1618 5 месяцев назад +92

    A lot of closures are due to online shopping and working from home. We don't order cups of coffee online but if people don't go to shops and office staff don't come into the office, the coffee shops in those areas will get significantly fewer customers, which might force them to close. The knock-on effect is massive. I live in a small block of six flats and every day there are several online shopping deliveries. The courier companies and the Royal Mail are the ones who benefit; not only do they deliver the goods to people's homes but the next day those same people are queuing at the post office returning some of what they've ordered online.

    • @miltonmiles6324
      @miltonmiles6324 5 месяцев назад +12

      While online shopping and deliveries do contribute to the demise of these shops, I don’t think that’s the whole story. In Kuala Lumpur where I live, online shopping and deliveries are massive yet shops are alive and well. It’s your rates that are killing you. VAT on Rent? That’s a first as a Malaysian.

    •  5 месяцев назад +7

      Honestly this is understandable, where I live it's cheaper to order online than to get a bus into town and back. I know what I'm getting is at the best price and I know it's getting sent to me for certain. There's no incentive to go into town anymore, although one thing I do miss is food, something exotic like a Japanese meal that I can't do properly myself, but if I look at the cost compared to a pair of discounted leggings I need for dance class, well I'm fine with home cooking. Even if I had more money to throw about, food quality has gone down hill to the point I don't really trust food I haven't cooked myself due to the fact there's little footfall. Unfortunately even if I were to come by more money, I don't see myself exiting this mindset any time soon.

    • @wulfsorenson8859
      @wulfsorenson8859 5 месяцев назад +2

      Yeah but online shopping has been around for years. This massive wave of closures has been caused by lockdowns and crazy rent increases.

  • @maewild7805
    @maewild7805 5 месяцев назад +19

    Also the icing on the cake for shops is the insane levels of shoplifting.

  • @ollyking7692
    @ollyking7692 4 месяца назад +4

    There is secondary property market behind these business properties , the investment market which buys up properties for rental income. This is additional reason why business property prices are so inflated, as almost no business owner has capital to buy their own premises.
    There should be lower business rates, but also commercial property is hugely inflated and close to operating like a cartel with almost zero oversight. There needs to be some constructive steps made towards both lowering business operating costs and improving local the economics, which would mean jobs and prosperity.
    Rental caps would also indirectly reduce business rates, as they are calculated on the basis of market rate for rent. Rental caps and lowering business rates should both be a priority for councils and central government but they are just too hooked on the money flow and don't see the bigger picture and the damage it is inflicting.
    I cant imagine these properties sitting empty is any good for council income isnt it better to have more businesses operating with lower rates.

  • @exploringwithjenn5314
    @exploringwithjenn5314 3 месяца назад

    Regarding your question about that large shop being closed at the "Bedford Street" Bus Stop on The Strand. As far as I remember it has been a Superdrug. I used to drive the 176 Bus Route there between 2016 and 2019. Loads of nice memories strolling in this area, from the Embankment to Trafalgar Square, Leicester Square, Piccadilly Circus etc. What I see there now in your video, it's shocking 😮

  • @fblondon8426
    @fblondon8426 6 месяцев назад +237

    Unfortunately London is finished only the rich foreigners can afford to live here now the London I know died long ago

    • @clairefitzpatrick7183
      @clairefitzpatrick7183 6 месяцев назад +17

      Left in 1988, I will never go back to the street I grew up on. My best friend warned me not to go in 2018. Rip😒

    • @MoviesNGames007uk
      @MoviesNGames007uk 6 месяцев назад +14

      The east end is not as we know it today

    • @quadders9198
      @quadders9198 6 месяцев назад +10

      Yup it's been completely corporatised. No soul. Born there in 1978, live in Kent now.

    • @TheWolfXCIX
      @TheWolfXCIX 6 месяцев назад +32

      Ultra wealthy foreigners and ultra poor foreigners. Either way it's absolutely finished

    • @frederick3467
      @frederick3467 6 месяцев назад +5

      ​@clairefitzpatrick7183 don't go you will just get depressed

  • @MrKiar1611
    @MrKiar1611 5 месяцев назад +131

    Came from HongKong and recently moved to London, i found there are a few things make me hesitate to open up a shop even I planned well and got my money ready.
    1) license+ permit : way to many and complicate to obtain and they cost a fortune
    2) crime rate and anti social behaviour: what's the point to open a shop if no one dare to come out after 6pm (except some regions in zone1)
    3) super long term tenency: I asked around and found out it starts from 5 years, and 15 years with 6 year break clause is not unusual. So let say if the business doesn't go well, it's a gaurantee bankrupt waiting ahead.
    4) minimum wage: let's be real, 11.5(min wage) * 8(hours) * 25(working days) *12 = 27.6k while average income in UK is 32k, the gap is not rewardful enough to take such a risk. Especially if It is a small business.
    5) VAT+business rate: only a small amount of business/investment can merely earn more than 20%, while VAT+business rate earn more from you riskfree.

    • @m.a.farrokhzad1962
      @m.a.farrokhzad1962 5 месяцев назад +2

      What's good then?

    • @MrKiar1611
      @MrKiar1611 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@m.a.farrokhzad1962 restaurant/bar/pub/cafe/takeaway shop/grocery store will stay, nail/hair salon can survive (beyond zone 2-3)
      retail is pretty much dead, except some luxury stores for watch/jewelery/bags/cloth.
      Gambling is blooming tho.
      Also, I would say nursing house can be a good business if considering the average age in UK is rising yearly.
      Shady kitchen is also a thing beucase of food delivery.
      actually most of the business can remain as good but there is no room for errors anymore, only big corp is able to take the risk.

    • @TigerBoyX15
      @TigerBoyX15 5 месяцев назад

      If you can't afford to pay people a decent Liveable Wage ..then go elsewhere...The People will not be a Slave to the likes of you...infact..go away

    • @TigerBoyX15
      @TigerBoyX15 5 месяцев назад +1

      The days of Chancers like You luv .are over..Pizz Off..

    • @MrKiar1611
      @MrKiar1611 5 месяцев назад +17

      @@TigerBoyX15 why so much hate, is it because I know how to spell?

  • @Bamsebjorn5000
    @Bamsebjorn5000 4 дня назад +1

    Im from swden and in the 60s, there were a store for specific items. One store for milk and chese, another for meat and food and on. We need to go back to this.

  • @thomash3218
    @thomash3218 4 месяца назад

    One thing mentioned which is very important its all the small expenses that really add up, like the toll fares for simply delivering goods

  • @stardust0805
    @stardust0805 5 месяцев назад +46

    it's all about concentration of capital, big players don't want the average person to have significant financial resources because it gives them independence. The concentration of capital takes place in many fields and does not only apply to real estate, it also applies to the food sector, large food concerns buy small companies or factories in order to stop prosperous businesses from growing.

    • @johncharleson8733
      @johncharleson8733 5 месяцев назад +6

      Top comment.

    • @FutureEngine
      @FutureEngine 5 месяцев назад +5

      It occurs in all fields but profits concentrate on the real estate because rent seeking is just so much easier than setting up new businesses or even opening up new locations for an existing business, and it's also the easier way for foreigners to invest in a country with regulations they are not familiar with.
      And profit and appreciation is more certain especially when the government doesn't put no counterbalances to put brakes to it.

    • @alanyosores5642
      @alanyosores5642 5 месяцев назад

      When the doctraines of colonizers pass to a wrong hand, then self destruction is next..because why they want to go other countries that hard to steal while they have easy to steal to their own soil😂😂😂😂

  • @0KiteEatingTree0
    @0KiteEatingTree0 6 месяцев назад +244

    I’m an ex Londoner. Was given a 40 year waiting list on a council property.
    I grew up in the run down, then affluent, now heading downhill area of Crouch End. Moved away from friends and family to live in the Midlands.
    The original cost of my parents house was £4000 in the 60’s
    Covid was bad. 2 decades of a sorry excuse for government hasn’t helped.

    • @freedomisslavery6840
      @freedomisslavery6840 6 месяцев назад +46

      Mass immigration is your answer. 10 million people added to the population in just over 20 years, 700k net immigration this year, 600k last year. That is the sole cause for the huge increase in demand for housing which has caused house prices and rent to explode and priced you out.

    • @billysequins
      @billysequins 6 месяцев назад +5

      Anything else you want to moan about?

    • @billysequins
      @billysequins 6 месяцев назад +48

      @@freedomisslavery6840 or that fact that Maggie flogged all the council houses in the Eighties and never bothered to build new ones

    • @stellayates4227
      @stellayates4227 6 месяцев назад +6

      It is worth remembering that £4000 was a lot when you consider what earnings were in the 1960's. I owned homes in London some decades ago and they were only affordable on two full time salaries and a deposit as 100% mortgages were not available.

    • @MariaLopez-hc2nm
      @MariaLopez-hc2nm 6 месяцев назад +7

      I bought my first flat in London SW19 for £12,000 near the tennis grounds in the 80's. Sold it for 40,000 in the 90's. Yes, huge changes have happened

  • @Rogue_Leader
    @Rogue_Leader 2 месяца назад +4

    The problem isn’t rates or even rents - it’s land values. Almost all of the land you walked on is owned by the Duke Of Westminster who has hoarded 10 billion quid, and sets the land rents. When the 6th Duke died, his son paid no inheritance tax on the £9.9 billion inheritance.

  • @caroljones151
    @caroljones151 5 месяцев назад +123

    I went to visit my daughter in London yesterday.
    The whole place was run down.
    We decided to take the tube up to Hampstead which is supposed to be a beautiful and wealthy area.
    We go out of the tube, wandered around for 10 minutes then left.
    It was run down, scruffy and nothing to do except charity shops.
    Headed to Wimbledon which seems to be thriving.
    Their town centre mall transformed and outdoor christmas markets and fun fair rides.
    I was very impressed with Wimbledon.
    For comparison I headed into central London several times over the last few months and it seems soulless.

    • @nebod1556
      @nebod1556 4 месяца назад

      I adore charity shops ...

    • @gauloise6442
      @gauloise6442 4 месяца назад +4

      I wonder what Camden is like now, that was the place to be when I was a student in the 00s.

    • @user-dh4lp2hh5b
      @user-dh4lp2hh5b 4 месяца назад

      What exactly is a tube?...

    • @lymangreen5020
      @lymangreen5020 4 месяца назад +1

      The tube is the subway.

    • @user-dh4lp2hh5b
      @user-dh4lp2hh5b 4 месяца назад

      @lymangreen5020 thanks...

  • @KingBarnaDuke
    @KingBarnaDuke 5 месяцев назад +126

    My hometown in Wiltshire is suffering too. There used to be 3 large factories, 16 pubs in walking distance, 4 nightclubs, 4 restaurants. All gone in the last 15 years.
    Shuttered shops, giant supermarkets and some charity shops are all there is.
    They've been building more and more houses though! The town went from 30,000 to 56,000 in that time. But there is nothing there. It's a zombie, the weekend used to be a blast in the centre , but it's just empty now.

    • @monicakristy4590
      @monicakristy4590 5 месяцев назад +3

      Lived in Salisbury 2002 to 2004 was wanting to go back, Did pass in 2007. I can only imagine how it feels now walking round the main shops. I remember many talks in the late 90s early 2000s about the impact the online shopping was starting to have for the next decade to social life in general, then COVID was a final nail in the coffin some 20 years later for township communities. 😢 The end of a generation of the last 20years.

    • @KingBarnaDuke
      @KingBarnaDuke 5 месяцев назад

      @@TheRandomSlogger Wiltshire is still lovely! Just not many towns are anymore.

    • @KingBarnaDuke
      @KingBarnaDuke 5 месяцев назад +7

      @@monicakristy4590 @TheRandomSlogger I consider myself very lucky that experienced a time when town centres were busy with families out shopping, pubs were packed with people having lunch and chatting, and the nights were dancing, drinking, and taxi from 1 club to the next!!
      And we could AFFORD it!!
      Good times!

    • @martinhale242
      @martinhale242 5 месяцев назад +1

      I live close to Salisbury it's going down hill very time I have to go in more shops are boarded up very time

    • @monicakristy4590
      @monicakristy4590 5 месяцев назад +7

      @@KingBarnaDuke my god yes!!! Pubs clubs pubs, shops and travel. I had almost no money and I travel the world for 3 years. There was always a job on the ready, with or without experience. Now some 18 years later my daughter is the same age I was then, wants to do these things but can't find a job that can even pay enough to cover rent with some left over savings to be had. Robbing these young adults if their independence. I'm so happy I got to live it. I can only wish we could offer that to others in the future.

  • @BATTLEZONEwzw
    @BATTLEZONEwzw 4 месяца назад +1

    Sounds crazy, but the bit where you said I’m back in the north, I breathed a massive sigh of relief for you. I don’t know why I
    Felt this way I just did.

  • @StephSancia
    @StephSancia 4 месяца назад +2

    I grew up in the 60s in HOUNSLOW London when Hounslow was Pretty COOL for a 6 year old. Hounslow West was the end of the Piccadilly line and the A1 bus took you up to Heathrow airport where we used to listen to the pilots talking and then nip across to the Ambassador lanes bowling alley and then back to Hounslow but in the late 60s early 70s there was a record boutique opposite the bus station where we'd all meet to listen to the latest vibes where they had record booths where you could listen to latest albums free of charge. Used to drink in the Windsor Castle pub with the one hit band Blackfoot Sue who lived opposite the pub and if was pretty cool with 2 families in Clare Road who were from overseas and the rest were all London born. Hounslow Heath fair multiple times a year and it was a pretty safe place to live where kids could go out at night SAFELY. Hampton Court on a Sunday with the family and Mum did all her shopping at the corner shop every week and she worked at the Home Office London. I don't even recognise the place now and it looks like a City from overseas in all honesty. From another country, that's how it looks to me. I was born in Kingston upon Thames but lived in Hounslow. I left mid 70s and never went back. I'm now in New Zealand. I have empathy with ANYONE who grew up in London in the 60s and 70s

  • @Human-lg8hb
    @Human-lg8hb 5 месяцев назад +59

    I’m a born and raised Londoner. I think London is just a transitional city, people come here to make money and leave, no one wants to stay here. When the business either makes it or fails they leave because it’s better to run a business not in London. Everyone I know wants to get out, it’s just gone downhill with ULEZ, extremely high public transport prices, and it’s hard to get a decent job. I also run my own business but it’s online, no way will I ever make it physically in London that would be a very bad financial decision. The only people that want to stay in London are outsiders that are drawn into the idea of living in a big city but most Londoners want out, because life can be so much better elsewhere, but we can’t move out yet.

  • @Daz8276
    @Daz8276 6 месяцев назад +183

    I was born in the East End (Forrest Gate), and lived in London until the age of eight. Many happy memories from feeding the ducks in Hide Park, going to the museums with Dad, and feeding the pigeons in Trafalgar Square. I returned to live and work in South Kensington in 97, moved back home to Cornwall thereafter, but have tried to visit every summer. I've always loved London, the vibe, the hustle and bustle, the many businesses! But I have to say that the city I loved has slowly disappeared to the point I don't now recognise it. It seems that one of the oldest and greatest cities in the world is slowing dying! Let's hope that this can be turned around!

    • @goldwhitedragon
      @goldwhitedragon 6 месяцев назад +21

      Diversity says nope.

    • @Emppu_T.
      @Emppu_T. 6 месяцев назад +12

      Khan!!

    • @xc43t
      @xc43t 6 месяцев назад +34

      @@goldwhitedragon Is this about diversity though? You could blame your average Pole or an immigrant from some African country but in reality a lot of properties are owned by some international management institutions that are owned by the top 1% percent. In case of UK there is always a factor of the old money. Other parts of Europe got rid of nobility at least partially. UK is still majorly silly in this regard.

    • @ottohashmi
      @ottohashmi 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@goldwhitedragonhas fuck all to do with diversity

    • @goldwhitedragon
      @goldwhitedragon 6 месяцев назад +5

      @@xc43t races are not interchangeable

  • @CollieJenn
    @CollieJenn 4 месяца назад +2

    Wow what an eye opener. Well done.
    You have to feel sad for the lost business and ruined communities.
    At least the guitar shops on Denmark Street are trading. I will take Pete Thousand's guitar for 50k please.

  • @gavinlew8273
    @gavinlew8273 3 месяца назад +3

    Thank you for this amazing video.

  • @carrielamarr2845
    @carrielamarr2845 5 месяцев назад +205

    This video made me so sad. I live in the US now, but grew up in London and worked in the city of London throughout my twenties. I came home to London for a month in September and damn it was depressing. Indeed, my old hometown has no real high street to speak of, let alone the many 'to let' signs everywhere, even in the heart of London. A few things have happened to kill the High St, including stores in tourist areas of London, but primarily it is the "trifecta" of the pandemic, rising prices c/o inflation, and lower wages. The pandemic was really the final blow to many retailers because London thrives on its tourist industry. No tourists = no income. The Govt. at least made businesses exempt from paying business rates from April 2020 to June 2021 during the height of the pandemic, & then the Govt, despite its empty rhetoric of " backing the high streets,” hiked up the business rate and raised the standard multiplier, leaving these businesses no other option but to raise the prices of their goods and services to cover these inflated costs. The other issue is that when I lived in London, barely a third of my wages went to rent. I had no student debt, and therefore more disposable income to spend in these high street stores. I have to sigh at the salaries today that are not much more than I earned back in the 1990s. Wages have stagnated and not remotely kept up with inflation, while the cost of housing has risen to unsupportable levels. It's all one big vicious circle, and it makes me unspeakably sad because this problem is nationwide, and not just in London. Thanks for your videos on this topic. They're bloody brilliant.

    • @TomokoMurakami
      @TomokoMurakami 5 месяцев назад +4

      Not sure where you live in America but have you been to any downtown areas of US cities such as San Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago, etc. and seen what is happening to ALL downtown areas? The Internet, Covid (ie you can work from home!) and democrat policies have killed all downtown areas. I'm an optimist and know that they'll be back though, albeit in a different form.

    • @cjay2
      @cjay2 5 месяцев назад +3

      No it isn't. It has NOTHING to do with the "plan demik".

    • @Threadbow
      @Threadbow 4 месяца назад

      People shopping online from covid days. Killed lot of business.
      You are right, the wages have stagnated so badly. I earned more in 90s than wages are now. That is a major problem.
      Thar and Thatcher sell off of housing. With capital going to central government not local.
      Times change

    • @mellie9633
      @mellie9633 4 месяца назад +4

      Same here I live in Canada now but the first 35 years of my life in London. The 70's to 90's were great but now nothing.

    • @BorsosGabor2023
      @BorsosGabor2023 4 месяца назад +5

      Tourists don't want to visit refugee camps.

  • @bbgunn917
    @bbgunn917 6 месяцев назад +203

    Did anyone else (who knew the area as it was last century) get the eerie sensation that the buildings have changed beyond belief? All the old warehouses in Covent Garden made over to look the same, flat-fronted rows of plate glass and RSJ framing that could be literally inside the metaverse. For a second I wondered if you were playing around with an AI background or something because it all looked so samey, unreal, even on Oxford Street- a digital construction. We're being pulled into a disaster and not enough of us seem to care.

    • @aum82
      @aum82 6 месяцев назад +2

      😮

    • @matthewwilliams3827
      @matthewwilliams3827 6 месяцев назад +12

      People are either oblivious or just don’t give a flying f.

    • @SparrowHills08
      @SparrowHills08 6 месяцев назад

      Noticed this on my trips to Amsterdam, LA and Moscow, rapid changes in the last 20 years in the form of removing colour and anything "unnecessary"; minimalism is their aim.
      If you want a real shock, go to Google Street View, you can compare street images from 2008 to now. We've let it become so soulless.

    • @Alanwcum
      @Alanwcum 6 месяцев назад +8

      I used to enjoy walking around the flower market in Covent Garden on a Sunday, Sadly , it has long gone.

    • @mrmrsmarshall9110
      @mrmrsmarshall9110 6 месяцев назад +14

      I grew up in London, born in the 60s, a kid in the 70s, teenager in the 80s, a mum and wife in the 90s, left and moved to Devon 2000. I feel I was hounded out, I lived in South London. Peckham, Camberwell, Dulwich and Croydon. Worked in the City and Belgravia, then Putney. Glad to see the back of it to be honest.

  • @aleemahyasmin5982
    @aleemahyasmin5982 3 месяца назад +1

    I remember The Tea House. It was very impressive.

  • @JDevlinAccySide
    @JDevlinAccySide Месяц назад +2

    Im lost for Words... I always thought i dont want to leave our shore's but its becoming more and more relevant im not going to Die on this Island. Godbless UK God bless everyone whos struggling. Amen

  • @notaclue822
    @notaclue822 5 месяцев назад +93

    It's not just happening in London, but it's particularly tragic that it's happening there, in such a special place known for its character.

    • @piotrwojdelko1150
      @piotrwojdelko1150 5 месяцев назад +4

      an effect of degradation middle class

    • @soavemusica
      @soavemusica 4 месяца назад +1

      People in trouble say "OMG", or "Jesus Christ" without meaning it. Things will not get better. EXODUS 20: 7 "Thou shalt not take the name of the LORD thy God in vain; for the LORD will not hold him guiltless that taketh his name in vain."

  • @julietrudgill9887
    @julietrudgill9887 5 месяцев назад +58

    Ex Londoner here. My family had stalls in Leather Lane Market, near where the Old Holborn tobacco warehouse was, Gamages Department store, Hatton Garden, Fleet Street. That market used to be heaving in the 1960s, as were all London markets. As soon as a place gets gentrified or corporate, authenticity dies.

    • @richmaniow
      @richmaniow 3 месяца назад +2

      Yep, lots of nice smart looking shops nobody can afford to rent.

    • @demographicsisdestiny
      @demographicsisdestiny 3 месяца назад +1

      And mass immigration right?

    • @Quincycle
      @Quincycle Месяц назад

      London has been irriversibly changed by mass immigration

  • @rockfordfos1
    @rockfordfos1 4 месяца назад +4

    I went back in 2008 with friends and relatives as soon as we got off at Victoria Station. We saw the shops and pub areas were vibrant and full of tourists streets were bustling. Then to see it now is very depressing. My friend who is a barrister in that area told me he misses it dearly dining and recreational activities has downgraded sharply.

    • @tomjardine100
      @tomjardine100 6 дней назад

      And that's in London, imagine the rest of the country where wages are lower ?

  • @devoncavan6502
    @devoncavan6502 5 месяцев назад +18

    One of my friends restaurants was forced to close in central london due to the rent increase after covid. The rent was 150k, the landlord increased it to 200k a year. Ridiculous

  • @captainharlock3998
    @captainharlock3998 6 месяцев назад +82

    As a Canadian, I'm proud to call myself a Londoner as I've been living here for the last 4 years. I've seen the decline live, and fast, and it truly is sad to see this living, buzzing city fall into oblivion, not slowly, but at a heart stopping pace... Renting has become all but impossible, of course people have much less disposable income, that affect the economy tremendously... I'm a freelance artist and been doing well enough to afford rent in London, however that leaves me with almost nothing to enjoy an evening at the pub or even some shopping once in a while. It's all about making rent and bills... Even though I really acknowledge I am one of the lucky few artist that didn't have to re profile during the pandemic, it is still a dire way of life...

    • @bambubombon
      @bambubombon 5 месяцев назад +17

      rent and bills is the sad reality in Spain too. luckily our main cities are still alive abd bustling

    • @captainharlock3998
      @captainharlock3998 5 месяцев назад +6

      @@bambubombon I had a month long contract in Seville and I absolutely LOVED it! Spain is such a great country!

    • @kkkkjjjj8113
      @kkkkjjjj8113 5 месяцев назад +10

      am spanish and live here is desaster, enslaved people that has so low salary its only going for payback government and rent house, government isnot doing anything for solve those problems, spanish people going outside to find new life

    • @GingerPeacenik
      @GingerPeacenik 5 месяцев назад

      "You will own nothing and (we will) be happy"- tha Davos parasites warned us of their plans and are carrying them out, but the masses refuse to see it or care. They won't see what's right in front of them, or care about it, unless their TV shows it to them and tells them that they should care about it.
      Blackrock is the reason why you don't have funds for the pub. Unless we unite and push back, it'll only get worse.

    • @bambubombon
      @bambubombon 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@captainharlock3998 seville would be too hot for me... but most Spanish cities are still lively and uplifting

  • @roriejackson4106
    @roriejackson4106 4 месяца назад +1

    6:03 hi mate, yes, the Strand, I noticed more closed shops in London. Here in West London it's a similar story - just down the road from Acton. In Covent garden a mate tried to open a restaurant nearby off Endell St, I bet that business rate was one of the reasons he went out of business. Ruined him.

  • @whatsleft100
    @whatsleft100 4 месяца назад +2

    Oh wow covent garden ! I only left London 6 months ago, im sure this has mostly occured since then as I used to walk around all those places weekly . Priced out of renting, couldn't afford to enjoy it anymore . Looks dead there , only big chains left . Nooo the teahouse! , I'm sure it was still open at the start of 23 :(

  • @crimsonlightbinder
    @crimsonlightbinder 6 месяцев назад +13

    wow, that's incredible. I was in covent garden back in 2016 and it was none if this, it was busy and bursting. London looks more and more like Detroit

  • @Red5x5x5
    @Red5x5x5 5 месяцев назад +46

    As well as all the financial pressures that you mentioned (great job by the way) there's also the pressure on the landlords/owner-occupiers to sell up. The sheer value of property and its reasonably steady increase in value, means that it is becoming more and more tempting to cash out. What's happening is that wealth management company's and foreign investment trusts are buying up everything they can, and then redeveloping it to add more flats. You'll have noticed that a lot of the empty units you saw were brand new or recently refurbished, and for some big landlords, they aren't even trying to let out their units, because they don't want the hassle: Their business model is to buy, redevelop or modernise, sit on the empty building for a few years, then sell it on at a profit. Pressure to sell to developers drives gentrification, and it's killing all our towns and cities, because we're losing all the features that make our owns areas unique. Once there's nothing to do in London but sit in your flat and order stuff off the Internet, what's the point in living there as opposed to anywhere else?

    • @opalfishsparklequasar8663
      @opalfishsparklequasar8663 5 месяцев назад +8

      It's ghastly,
      it's by design,
      & it's global.

    • @ls.c.5682
      @ls.c.5682 5 месяцев назад +3

      Yep. I ranted elsewhere in this comment section about how the central London music scene around Tottenham Court Road / Denmark Street is dead - now you have to go out to New Cross or Dalston and similar places to catch gigs but it won't be long until those places get their character changed beyond recognition too

    • @theberlintoker
      @theberlintoker 4 месяца назад +2

      The more I scroll down and read the comments, the more I want to stay in Germany. #justsaying

  • @redkiwi5980
    @redkiwi5980 Месяц назад +2

    I visited Auckland a few months ago and stayed in the CBD. At the time I was a little shocked at how many closed businesses there were and how down beat it felt. In hindsight, I am no longer very shocked.

  • @steve-o4207
    @steve-o4207 4 месяца назад +3

    Well done sidiq -

  • @tomayris3671
    @tomayris3671 6 месяцев назад +7

    Im a london bicycle courier, and honestly you hardly touched the surface. All those big corporate office buildings are maybe 20% occupancy. It is utterly crazy currently.

  • @AB-kc3yc
    @AB-kc3yc 5 месяцев назад +156

    I am so pleased that I had the best of London, living and working there for 50 yrs. It was safe, exciting, full of energy, character, with an historic soul. Real London will always be a part of me.

    • @nebod1556
      @nebod1556 4 месяца назад +9

      Real London is now ...real is what is current ...

    • @noahhyde8769
      @noahhyde8769 4 месяца назад +15

      I wasn't even watching the boarded-up shops in this video so much as I was noticing the people, in London. So many, many non-indigenous living there, now. And don't think that that doesn't have a LOT to do with the MAJOR issues the UK is facing, now. It needs to be said, faced and addressed, folks.

    • @lexxlars5762
      @lexxlars5762 4 месяца назад +7

      The biggest lie is if you’re tired of London, your tired of life . Absolute crock of Shiite . I hate the place .

    • @raywilson3166
      @raywilson3166 4 месяца назад +9

      @@nebod1556 no it has been taken over by too many people who don't share British values

    • @nebod1556
      @nebod1556 4 месяца назад

      @@raywilson3166 Tell me some British values? (real is what is now agree or not agree and it is not going to change in future ...)...So British values?

  • @simon5005
    @simon5005 4 месяца назад

    I also watched your video about how much flats are going for, and it's jaw-dropping! It looks like the same thing happening in London that's happened in San Francisco. I live in Boston, and it's very expensive to live here, but not as many places closing down. Perhaps you need to leave there for a better economy elsewhere. Guess I won't be going now to London next year like I planned. 😢

  • @sezybabe100
    @sezybabe100 4 дня назад

    Wow covent garden actually shocked me! That's so sad!

  • @thegreygeek3514
    @thegreygeek3514 5 месяцев назад +141

    I live in the States, and we have much the same going on here, in cities. Even capital cities, and it looks identical. Thanks for sharing! More people need to do this to let everyone know just what is happening! Thank you, Cheers!

    • @uo9990
      @uo9990 5 месяцев назад

      Its a world wide phenomenon.
      In Greece is the same as well.
      When a small group of people said.
      You will own nothing, and you will be happy.
      We knew what was coming.
      And off course we were considered as conspiracy theorists.
      By the majority of people.
      Greed governance will continue till 2030.
      Worldwide
      Things will get worse.
      Now you know,
      Believe it or not, being accused as conspiracy theorist i don't even care.
      Just look around you, its a new era , the empire its collapsing, a new one is reborn
      Adopt or die.
      Btw i don't take drugs 😂

    • @Lyrielonwind
      @Lyrielonwind 5 месяцев назад +4

      I lived in San Francisco and I have watched videos recordings in Finantial District on Friday at noon and it looked like a ghost city. 😢

    • @jaspal201
      @jaspal201 4 месяца назад

      It's the zionists that control you

    • @richardchiriboga4424
      @richardchiriboga4424 4 месяца назад +6

      Many cities in the US are the same.

    • @Praksifey_Sofronin
      @Praksifey_Sofronin 4 месяца назад +4

      From Russia with wonderful love

  • @pitotzen2387
    @pitotzen2387 5 месяцев назад +52

    When I was a boy, my Grandpa told me London was his favorite place he ever visited. This saddens me to see

    • @capri2673
      @capri2673 4 месяца назад

      It's still great to visit but not to live there.

  • @cliffwheeler7357
    @cliffwheeler7357 3 месяца назад

    Glad to see Regent Sound guitar shop in Denmark Street appears to be still open. I purchased my Fender Strat there thirty odd years ago. What is going on in Denmark Street with all that scaffolding, it looks such a mess.

  • @ronaldhall2489
    @ronaldhall2489 3 месяца назад +1

    Good video sir thanks. Do the phone booths work? You can't find one in the states

  • @scott4334
    @scott4334 6 месяцев назад +220

    I grew up here and I cannot wait to get out like most of my fellow Londoners. This place has become an unrecognisable hellhole.

    • @davidrhodes5245
      @davidrhodes5245 6 месяцев назад +25

      Hellhole ??…..Nothing like overexaggerating eh.

    • @scott4334
      @scott4334 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@davidrhodes5245 oh yeah last week in the space of 10 mins walking past a bloke overdosing on the floor in Brixton, watching a girl get her bag snatched, then walking down towards the station hearing every foreign language under the sun parked up as Ubereats cyclists and then having to walk over the junkies shooting up on the steps of Brixton station which now has daily security guards as of the last few weeks. 50% of the pubs and clubs have shut most replaced with flats. Yep lovely stuff mate, wake up you clueless div. Why have so many Londoners left?

    • @leejames1792
      @leejames1792 6 месяцев назад +69

      @@davidrhodes5245 ever heard of a figure of speech? He's right though, London is becoming a dump.

    • @selenaannesmith1604
      @selenaannesmith1604 6 месяцев назад

      ​@davidrhodes5245 who's exaggerating it's a shithole and not London as it should be anymore

    • @johfunut2529
      @johfunut2529 6 месяцев назад +56

      ​@davidrhodes5245 he's completely right though. London is actually a shit hole now. He's bang on the money unfortunately.

  • @hawkhoskins4250
    @hawkhoskins4250 6 месяцев назад +98

    Used to install the furniture in these places in Central London. We had to charge them a fortune due to the amount of time travelling the 12 miles into central 1.5 hours + 2.5-3hours on the motorway, then upto 10 parking tickets per day. You can’t take 2 meter cupboards on the bus but traffic wardens have no rational behaviour towards the people trying to keep the show running. I hated London but it paid well, couldn’t ever understand how they pay the bills.

    • @alexdewar6584
      @alexdewar6584 6 месяцев назад +13

      Same here floorlaying and travelling from Manchester, once paid £60 to park and congestion charge etc etc. Did last job in 2010 and couldn't justify the expense, will never go back even to visit.

    • @pauldavies5655
      @pauldavies5655 6 месяцев назад

      worked in that SHITEHOLE called london over the years since 1984.
      i d rather live in a frigging gulag in russia during the 1940 s !

    • @Acheron666
      @Acheron666 6 месяцев назад +3

      My dad was a shop-fitter in London in the late 70s to late 80s……..Amazing, clean and beautiful city London was back then.
      Good money back then as well for working in London.

  • @azoriusmage
    @azoriusmage 29 дней назад +1

    Before covid I worked in the Strand and almost all those shops were full there and in Covent Garden. Covid has certainly finished some off but the rates are a ridiculous amount to pay before even paying rent, staff etc