Camden Town used to be a quiet little village surrounded by fields with a peaceful river running through it, until the beginning of the nineteenth century, when London crept in and swallowed it up within the space of a few years. The river was piped off underground and the Regent's Canal built to carry trade more efficiently, down to the Thames at Limehouse. The owner of the farmland, William Agar, struck lucrative deals for his land with the canal company and the railway company, and the mainline stations at St Pancras and Kings Cross were built, along with elegant streets and expensive housing for businessmen and railway executives. The new little town quickly filled up. Its pretty houses and convenience for the City made it a fashionable place to live, especially by the canal, full of pleasant spots in those days. It wound round the edge of lush green Regent's Park, where there were entertainments and public concerts in summer. In 1845 the Royal Zoological Gardens (now London Zoo) opened to the public, creating an added attraction.

However, by the turn of the twentieth century, Camden Town had become very industrialised and much of its housing was being rented out room by room to poor immigrant families, mainly Greek and Turkish. Hosts of scabby little businesses filled up Camden High Street and Kentish Town Road. Trade on the canal was dying out, and parts of it were highly polluted by factories discharging waste. My father tells tales of swimming in the canal as a kid in the Fifties, when they always swam by factories because the water was warm there: hot jets of lord-knows-what, shooting into the canal, making a spa for the local kids. A far cry from the elegant entertainments of the original inhabitants. The kids spent the rest of their time mucking about on the bomb sites, which lingered after the war for around twenty years because nobody could be bothered to develop the run-down area.

By the seventies the bomb sites had been neatly filled with council estates and the area's fortunes started looking up again. The canal was improved and the towpaths re-opened in 1973, and all the qualities which had made Camden Town attractive back in the 1800s started to pull the rich punters back in. The canal market and local clubs and pubs became highly fashionable. In the 80s TV-AM built flashy modern offices near the market, and Nick Grimshaw designed the new Sainsbury's: lots of shiny steel and neo-industrialism, with a clump of attendant houses like futuristic sardine tins along the canal.

Today the average price of a medium-sized house in Camden Town is half a million, five times more than William Agar was paid for the whole area back in the 1800s: but if you're a tourist, don't expect it to look expensive and pretty. It's shabby and peeling, and still run-down. Even the Grimshaw flats have weathered, and are begining to look decidedly manky. The canal is cleaner, but it's something of a hang-out for cidered-up old crusties and smackheads, skimming a flotsam of loose change off the wake of the tide of tourists which chokes the streets round the market on Saturdays. The market itself is a bit of a rip-off, and the cafés are badly placed for people-watching and none too clean, but the freakshow is one of the best in London, as a few people above have pointed out. This week there seems to be a trend towards enormous polio-child platform boots, gleaming PVC zebraskin trousers, and plastic hair extensions. Not hair exactly, but 2mm thick strands of stuff like candy, faintly shiny, knotted to the scalp. If this is your dream outfit, you can get it here..