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Gentrification in East London: A Photographic Study

July 3, 2026
Junction of Hanbury Street & Commercial Street. East London 1990.
Passing a fashion poster in Commercial Street. East London, January 2019.

The photographs above depict the same stretch of Commercial Street in East London, taken almost three decades apart. Together they provide a visual study of continuity and change in one of London’s most rapidly transformed neighbourhoods.

The first photograph documents the area in 1990, when Spitalfields was still marked by the effects of economic decline following decades of deindustrialisation. Much of the surrounding district retained its traditional working-class character, and only a few years after this image was taken the historic Spitalfields fruit and vegetable market closed and relocated to Leyton, bringing to an end more than three centuries of trading on the site. The closure marked a significant turning point in the area’s economic and social history.

By contrast, the second photograph, taken in 2019, juxtaposes a passer-by with a large fashion advertisement, reflecting a neighbourhood increasingly associated with design, creative industries, boutique retail and affluent consumers. Commercial Street has evolved into a place where global brands and lifestyle marketing occupy spaces that once served working-class communities, local workshops and independent businesses.

Together, the photographs chart a profound transformation in the area’s social identity. The 1990 image belongs to an East End still characterised by relatively affordable housing and long-established immigrant communities, particularly those of Jewish and later Bangladeshi heritage. By 2019, the same streets had become emblematic of London’s wider process of gentrification, attracting professionals, technology companies, galleries, restaurants and rapidly rising property values.

The two photographs therefore raise important questions about who ultimately benefits from urban regeneration. While investment undoubtedly brought improvements to the physical environment and generated new economic activity, these gains were accompanied by escalating rents and house prices that made it increasingly difficult for lower-income residents and independent traders to remain. House prices in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets increased by well over 300 per cent between the mid-1990s and the late 2010s, while commercial rents followed a similar upward trajectory. At the same time, census data show that the proportion of residents employed in professional and managerial occupations rose substantially, reflecting a marked shift in the social composition of the neighbourhood. The fashion poster in the second image becomes more than an advertisement: it symbolises a consumer economy increasingly directed towards a different demographic from the communities that historically gave the East End its distinctive character.

Urban renewal is rarely a straightforward story of progress or decline. Instead, it is a story of competing interests, changing identities and the continual reshaping of place. The transformation of Spitalfields undoubtedly created wealth and restored much of the built environment, yet it also displaced many long-standing residents, small businesses and traditional street markets. Although developers and often the local Council promoted regeneration as a process that would benefit the wider community, the evidence suggests that its rewards were very unevenly distributed.

Sclater Street Market c.1985
Sclater Street Market. East London 1985.
glasses
Junction of Bethnal Green Road & Sclater Street. East London, April 2018.
Brick Lane c.1986
Keeping the pavement clean on Brick Lane. East London 1986.
Man wearing a straw hat on Brick Lane. East London 2018.
Man with a pram on Toynbee Street c. 1989
Man with a pram on Toynbee Street. East London 1989.
At the junction of Commercial and Hanbury Streets. East London, 2013.
Shop on Commercial Street next to Puma Court. East London 2018.
Hanbury Street Mela c.1984
Slow bike race at the Hanbury Street Mela. East London 1984.
Whitechapel Road. East London 1983.
Wearing headphones in Bishopsgate. East London 2024.
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