Harringay is a residential area of North London and is close to Crouch End. There is plenty to see and visit in Harringay with its vibrant and cosmopolitan main shopping street which is Grand Parade, Green Lanes. Along the parade there are many different types of restaurants, cafes and pubs to visit. This would be an ideal opportunity to meet with one of our stunningly beautiful
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Within the parade you will find the famous long established Disney’s furniture store which has traded there since 1913. Among the several pubs in the area you will find the Grade II listed Salisbury where part of the 1980 film ‘The Long Good Friday’ was filmed as well as the 1992 biopic of Charlie Chaplin, Harringay’s oldest pub is the Queens Head and towards the southern end stands the well-preserved Victorian Beaconsfield public house.
The main road feels definitely cosmopolitan whereas the population in the surrounding streets is more homogenous. Although Harringay is approximately 5 miles from the centre of London over 20% of the area is green space and the only waterway still running above ground is the man-made New River which was constructed in 1619 to bring water into London from Hertfordshire. There are however, two natural rivers which still flow through Harringay underground, these are just two of the many springs and streams which used to flow though this part of London. There is The New River Path which is accessible from Wightman Road and from Green Lanes opposite Finsbury Park. The green areas in London are precious, Finsbury Park is officially part of Harringay and is a tranquil and beautiful place for those afternoon and evening strolls, as is the Green Flag awarded Railway Fields Local Nature Reserve which is close to Harringay Green Lanes Station.
Harringay Arena and Harringay Stadium have their place in history as the Arena was home to the Horse of the Year show for its first ten years from 1947 onwards and was featured on the BBC sports programme ‘Grandstand’. The Stadium was the home of Greyhound racing which was featured on London Weekend Television’s ‘World of Sport between 1972 and 1982.