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London Borough of Camden

The London Borough of Camden (/ˈkæmdən/)[3] is a London borough in Inner London. Camden Town Hall, on Euston Road, lies 1.4 mi (2.3 km) north of Charing Cross. The borough was established on 1 April 1965 from the area of the former boroughs of Hampstead, Holborn, and St Pancras, which prior to its establishment had comprised part of the historic County of London.

London Borough of Camden
Motto(s): 
Non sibi, sed toti
(Not for self, but for all)
Camden shown within Greater London
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Constituent countryEngland
RegionLondon
Ceremonial countyGreater London
Created1 April 1965
Admin HQTown Hall, Judd Street, St Pancras, London
Government
 • TypeLondon borough council
 • BodyCamden London Borough Council
 • LeadershipLeader & Cabinet (Labour)
 • MayorCouncillor Nazma Rahman[1]
 • London AssemblyAnne Clarke (Lab) AM for Barnet and Camden
 • MPs
Area
 • Total8.4 sq mi (21.8 km2)
 • Rank308th (of 309)
Population
 (2021)
 • Total210,1361
 • Rank87th (of 309)
 • Density24,970/sq mi (9,641/km2)
  • Rank9th (of 309)
Time zoneUTC (GMT)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+1 (BST)
Postcodes
EC, N, NW, W, WC
Area code020
GSS codeE09000007
PoliceMetropolitan Police
Websitecamden.gov.uk
1 There are concerns about the accuracy of this data[2]

The cultural and commercial land uses in the south contrast with the bustling mixed-use districts such as Camden Town and Kentish Town in the centre and leafy residential areas around Hampstead Heath in the north. Well known attractions include The British Museum, The British Library, the famous views from Parliament Hill, the London Zoo, the BT Tower, The Roundhouse and Camden Market. As of 2021 it has a population of 210,136.

The local authority is Camden London Borough Council.[4]

History

 
Former Camden Town market (2011); was demolished in early 2015 to make room for the Hawley Wharf redevelopment project.

The borough was created in 1965 from the areas of the former metropolitan boroughs of Hampstead, Holborn, and St Pancras, which had formed part of the County of London.[5] The initial Herbert Commission report recommended that the new borough consist of St Pancras and Hampstead, but Holborn was later added.

According to Enid Wistrich, who was a member of Hampstead Council at the time, the name "Camden" was the idea of Alderman Room, the Leader of Hampstead Council, and Mr Wilson, the Town Clerk, while travelling in a taxi through Camden Town. The name "Fleet" had also been suggested, after the underground river that flowed through the three boroughs, but that was rejected as the river was little more than a sewer. Other suggestions included "Penhamborn", 'Bornhamcras" and "Hohampion". Government guidelines for the naming of the new boroughs suggested that the chosen name should be short and simple, and ideally one that was generally associated with the centre of the new Borough. The name "Camden" met those criteria.[6]

The name "Camden Town" was derived from Camden Place, the seat of Charles Pratt, 1st Earl Camden who had owned and developed land in the area in the 1790s.[7][8]

The transcribed diaries of William Copeland Astbury, recently made available, describe Camden and the surrounding areas in great detail from 1829–1848.[9][10]

There are 162 English Heritage blue plaques[11] in the borough of Camden representing the many diverse personalities that have lived there.[12]

Geography and economy

The borough was formed in 1965 by the merger of the metropolitan boroughs of St Pancras, Hampstead and Holborn. The first two of these had their origins in medieval Ancient Parishes of the same name, while Holborn was formed by a union of much smaller units.

The area of the old parish and borough of Hampstead in the north-west includes Belsize Park and part of Kilburn. The old parish and borough of St Pancras, which occupies most of the modern borough includes Camden Town, Kentish Town, Gospel Oak, Somers Town, King's Cross, Chalk Farm, Dartmouth Park, the core area of Fitzrovia and a part of Highgate.

 
The Ancient Parishes of – west to east – Paddington and St Marylebone (in the modern City of Westminster), and St Pancras (in the modern London Borough of Camden) in 1834

In the south, the old Borough of Holborn was formed from the combined parish of Bloomsbury and St Giles, and most of the parish of Holborn (with the remaining part in the ancient Farringdon Without ward of the City of London).

The economy and land uses of the West End[13][14][15] and other southern parts of the borough reflect their more central location. Camden has the seventh largest economy in the UK[11] with a number of major companies headquartered in the borough; Google is in the process of completing a major headquarter building in King’s Cross.[16] Camden Town Brewery is among the newer businesses that have thrived in the borough.

In the far south of the borough, Lincoln's Inn Fields is within 500 metres of the Thames. The northern part of the borough includes the less densely developed areas of Hampstead, Hampstead Heath and Kentish Town. There are a number of Parks and open spaces in the London Borough of Camden. Neighbouring boroughs are the City of Westminster and the City of London to the south, Brent to the west of the originally Roman Watling Street (now the A5 Road), Barnet and Haringey to the north and Islington to the east. It covers all or part of the N1, N6, N7, N19, NW1, NW2, NW3, NW5, NW6, NW8, EC1, WC1, WC2, W1 and W9 postcode areas.

For planning policy purposes, the London Plan places Camden in the 'Central London' group of boroughs.[17]

Governance and politics

Local government

 
A map showing the wards of Camden since 2022

Camden Town Hall is located in Judd Street in St Pancras. Camden London Borough Council was controlled by the Labour Party continuously from 1971 until the 2006 election, when the Liberal Democrats became the largest party. In 2006, two Green Cllrs, Maya de Souza and Adrian Oliver, were elected (to Highgate Ward) and were the first Green Party councillors in Camden. In 1985 when the borough was rate-capped, the Labour leadership joined the rebellion in which it declared its inability to set a budget in an unsuccessful attempt to force the Government to allow higher spending. Camden was the fourth to last council to drop out of the campaign, doing so in the early hours of 6 June.

Borough councillors are elected every four years. Since May 2022 the electoral wards in Camden are Belsize, Bloomsbury, Camden Square, Fortune Green, Frognal, Gospel Oak, Hampstead Town, Haverstock, Highgate, Holborn and Covent Garden, Kentish Town North, Kentish Town South, Kilburn, King's Cross, Primrose Hill, Regent's Park, St Pancras and Somers Town and West Hampstead.

Between 2006 and 2010 Labour lost two seats to the Liberal Democrats through by-elections, in Kentish Town and Haverstock wards. A Labour Councillor in Haverstock ward also defected to the Liberal Democrats in February 2009. The Conservatives also lost two seats, one to the Liberal Democrats in Hampstead, and one to the Green Party, Alexander Goodman, in Highgate, taking the total number of Green Party Councillors to three. At the local elections on 6 May 2010 the Labour party regained full control of Camden council.

The organisation's staff are led by the Chief Executive who is currently Jenny Rowlands. The organisation is divided into three directorates:

  • Supporting People
  • Supporting Communities
  • Corporate Services

The directorates are headed by an Executive Director who reports directly to the Chief Executive. Each directorate is divided into a number of divisions headed by a Director. They, in turn, are divided into groups which are themselves divided into services. This is a similar model to most local government in London.

London Assembly

Camden forms part of the Barnet and Camden London Assembly constituency, represented by Anne Clarke of the Labour Party

UK Parliament

There are two parliamentary constituencies covering Camden: Hampstead and Kilburn in the north, represented by Labour's Tulip Siddiq, and Holborn and St. Pancras in the south, represented by Keir Starmer, the leader of the Labour Party.[18]

Demographics

 
Population pyramid of the Borough of Camden in 2021
Population
YearPop.±%
1801 96,795—    
1811 124,741+28.9%
1821 158,077+26.7%
1831 192,228+21.6%
1841 228,950+19.1%
1851 270,197+18.0%
1861 301,408+11.6%
1871 332,619+10.4%
1881 363,830+9.4%
1891 376,500+3.5%
1901 362,581−3.7%
1911 349,184−3.7%
1921 335,408−3.9%
1931 322,212−3.9%
1941 286,956−10.9%
1951 255,558−10.9%
1961 231,143−9.6%
1971 209,097−9.5%
1981 161,100−23.0%
1991 181,489+12.7%
2001 198,027+9.1%
2011 220,338+11.3%
2021 210,136−4.6%
Source: A Vision of Britain through time and the ONS

In 1801, the civil parishes that form the modern borough were already developed and had a total population of 96,795. This continued to rise swiftly throughout the 19th century as the district became built up, reaching 270,197 in the middle of the century. When the railways arrived the rate of population growth slowed, for while many people were drawn in by new employment, others were made homeless by the new central London termini and construction of lines through the district. The population peaked at 376,500 in the 1890s, after which official efforts began to clear the overcrowded slums around St Pancras and Holborn.

After World War II, further suburban public housing was built to rehouse the many Londoners made homeless in the Blitz, and there was an exodus from London towards the new towns under the Abercrombie Plan for London (1944). As industry declined during the 1970s the population continued to decline, falling to 161,100 at the start of the 1980s. It has now begun to rise again with new housing developments on brownfield sites and the release of railway and gas work lands around Kings Cross. A 2017 study found that the eviction rate of 6 per 1,000 renting households in Camden is the lowest rate in London.[19]

The 2001 census gave Camden a population of 198,000, an undercount that was later revised to 202,600.[20] The latest ONS projection puts the 2019 population at 270,000.[21]

On 20 May 1999, the Camden New Journal newspaper documented 'Two Camdens' syndrome as a high-profile phenomenon differentiating the characteristics of education services in its constituencies. In 2006, Dame Julia Neuberger's book reported similar variation as a characteristic of Camden's children's health services. Her insider's view was corroboration – in addition to the 2001 "Inequalities" report by Director of Public Health Dr. Maggie Barker of "stark contrasts in" health and education opportunities – of earlier similar Audit Commission findings and a verification/update of the 1999 CNJ report.[22]

Ethnicity

The following table shows the ethnic group of respondents in the 2001 and 2011 census in Camden.

Ethnic group 1981 estimations[23] 1991[24] 2001[25] 2011[26] 2021[27]
Number % Number % Number % Number % Number %
White: Total 135,004 89.2% 140,026 82.15% 144,896 73.17% 146,055 66.29% 125,064 59.6%
White: British 104,390 52.72% 96,937 43.99% 74,348 35.4%
White: Irish 9,149 4.62% 7,053 3.20% 5,325 2.5%
White: Gypsy or Irish Traveller 167 0.08% 128 0.1%
White: Roma 978 0.5%
White: Other 31,357 15.84% 41,898 19.02% 44,285 21.1%
Asian or Asian British: Total 16,204 9.5% 24,021 12.13% 35,446 16.09% 38,042 18.1%
Asian or Asian British: Indian 2,867 1.68% 4,574 2.31% 6,083 2.76% 6,952 3.3%
Asian or Asian British: Pakistani 760 0.44% 1,250 0.63% 1,489 0.68% 1,610 0.8%
Asian or Asian British: Bangladeshi 6,021 3.5% 12,569 6.35% 12,503 5.67% 14,356 6.8%
Asian or Asian British: Chinese 2,633 1.54% 3,470 1.75% 6,493 2.95% 6,728 3.2%
Asian or Asian British: Other Asian 3,923 2.3% 2,158 1.09% 8,878 4.03% 8,396 4.0%
Black or Black British: Total 9,394 5.5% 16,374 8.27% 18,060 8.20% 18,892 9.1%
Black or Black British: African 4,643 2.72% 11,795 5.96% 10,802 4.90% 14,191 6.8%
Black or Black British: Caribbean 3,054 1.79% 3,635 1.84% 3,496 1.59% 2,703 1.3%
Black or Black British: Other Black 1,697 1% 944 0.48% 3,762 1.71% 1,998 1.0%
Mixed or British Mixed: Total 7,429 3.75% 12,322 5.59% 13,938 6.6%
Mixed: White and Black Caribbean 1,654 0.84% 2,494 1.13% 2,558 1.2%
Mixed: White and Black African 1,224 0.62% 1,800 0.82% 2,059 1.0%
Mixed: White and Asian 1,983 1.00% 3,880 1.76% 4,243 2.0%
Mixed: Other Mixed 2,568 1.30% 4,148 1.88% 5,078 2.4%
Other: Total 4,820 2.8% 5,300 2.68% 8,455 3.84% 14,200 6.8%
Other: Arab 3,432 1.56% 4,417 2.1%
Other: Any other ethnic group 4,820 2.8% 5,300 2.68% 5,023 2.28% 9,783 4.7%
Ethnic minority: Total 16,303 10.8% 30,418 17.8% 53,124 26.83% 74,283 33.71% 85,072 40.4%
Total 151,307 100% 170,444 100% 198,020 100% 220,338 100% 210,136 100%

Religion

 
Religious makeup of Camden by single year age groups in 2021

The following shows the religious identity of residents residing in Camden according to the 2001, 2011 and the 2021 censuses.

Religion 2001[28] 2011[29] 2021[30]
Number % Number % Number %
Holds religious beliefs 134,545 67.9 118,949 54.0 118,581 56.4
Christian 93,259 47.1 74,821 34.0 65,980 31.4
Muslim 22,906 11.6 26,643 12.1 33,830 16.1
Jewish 11,153 5.6 9,823 4.5 10,079 4.8
Hindu 3,031 1.5 3,141 1.4 3,991 1.9
Sikh 443 0.2 465 0.2 487 0.2
Buddhist 2,595 1.3 2,789 1.3 2,410 1.1
Other religion 1,161 0.6 1,267 0.6 1,842 0.9
No religion 43,609 22.0 56,113 25.5 72,776 34.6
Religion not stated 19,866 10.0 45,276 20.5 18,743 8.9
Total population 198,020 100.0 220,338 100.0 210,100 100.0
Note: The number of residents in the "Religion not stated" category in 2011 was overestimated due to an error processing the 2011 census data[31]

Landmarks

Parks and open spaces

London is well known for its greenery and the Parks and open spaces in the London Borough of Camden make an important contribution to this. Hampstead Heath is well known for its view over London, notably from Parliament Hill, its wild nature and its Hampstead Heath Ponds. Camden shares Regents Park with Westminster and the views from Primrose Hill are famous.

Attractions

Education

The Borough of Camden is home to a large number of primary, secondary and tertiary institutions. Over recent years, a number of significant institutions have moved into the borough or are planning to do so. The included Central Saint Martins, the Francis Crick Institute, as well as the planned move by Moorfields Eye Hospital, recently unveiled as Project Oriel.[32]

Primary schools

The London Borough of Camden is the local education authority for the borough, organised through the Children, Schools and Families directorate.

Major public and private bodies

Some of London's best universities and teaching institutions are located in the Borough of Camden. They include the main campus of University College London, part of the campus of the London School of Economics near Lincoln's Inn Fields, and Central Saint Martins.

Public services

Police

Camden is policed by the Metropolitan Police Service. There are two police stations across the borough, situated at Holborn and Kentish Town. There are various other contact points around the borough including West Hampstead, Greenland Road, Highgate Road, Station House (Swiss Cottage), West End Lane, Hampstead Town Hall and Kingsway College. All locations have varying opening hours with Kentish Town Police Station open to the public on a 24-hour basis.

Hampstead Heath, situated within the London Borough of Camden and managed by the City of London Corporation, has its own Constabulary who deal with everyday incidents on the Heath, however, all serious criminal offences are passed to the Metropolitan Police to investigate.

With a large London Underground network and major railway stations such as King's Cross, St Pancras and Euston, Camden also has a much larger presence of British Transport Police (BTP) than many other London boroughs. BTP are responsible for policing Great Britain's railway network.

London Fire Brigade

The area has three fire stations: Euston, Kentish Town and West Hampstead and they are operated by London Fire Brigade in the borough of Camden. None of these fire stations are home to any specialist units; only pumping appliances and a rescue tender.[33][34]

Public libraries

Camden is the home of the British Library. In addition, Camden has numerous libraries which include:

As well as a number of community libraries including Keats community library.

Transport

 
View of the railway bridge over Camden High St. which carries the North London Line
 
St Pancras International – home to Eurostar trains
 
King's Cross St Pancras tube station served by the most tube lines on the network

There are no motorways in the borough, and few stretches of dual carriageway road, but the borough has great strategic transport significance to London, due to presence of three of the capital's most important rail termini, which are lined up along the Euston Road.

The position of the railway termini on Euston Road, rather than in a more central position further south, is a result of the influential recommendations of the 1846 Royal Commission on Metropolitan Railway Termini that sought to protect the West End districts a short distance south of the road.[35]

Rail

National Rail

Three of the fourteen central London's railway terminals are located in the borough. Euston, St Pancras and Kings Cross are the London termini for the West Coast, Midland and East Coast Main Lines and also High Speed 1. This connects the borough with the East of England, East Midlands, West Midlands, North East & West England, North Wales, Scotland, South East England, France, Belgium and the Netherlands.

Since 14 November 2007 when St Pancras International became the new terminus of Eurostar, a major regeneration of the area has occurred with the King's Cross Central development happening behind the station.

London Overground's North London Line services run through the borough serving Camden Road, Kentish Town West, Gospel Oak, Hampstead Heath, Finchley Road & Frognal and West Hampstead. London Overground also operates the Watford DC Line services from Euston serving South Hampstead, trains continue to Watford in Hertfordshire.

Thameslink route services serve St Pancras, Kentish Town and West Hampstead Thameslink stations. Currently the Thameslink network is undergoing a major expansion project called the Thameslink Programme. This will link more places in Southern England to the borough and to the East of England. While some services on the Great Northern network, which currently terminate at King's Cross will be diverted onto the Thameslink network, all work is due to be complete by 2016.[36]

Underground

The London Borough of Camden is served by 18 London Underground stations and 8 of the 11 lines.

The three major rail termini are served by two underground stations, Euston and the combined King's Cross St Pancras station. Between them, the termini are served by the Circle, Hammersmith & City, Metropolitan, Northern, Piccadilly and Victoria lines. The Central and Jubilee lines serve other parts of the borough, as does the Elizabeth line.

As well as the two major termini stations, the borough's other stations are: Euston Square, Warren Street, Goodge Street, Tottenham Court Road, Holborn, Russell Square, Chancery Lane, Mornington Crescent, Camden Town, Chalk Farm, Belsize Park, Hampstead, West Hampstead, Finchley Road, Swiss Cottage and Kentish Town.

Future

The proposed High Speed 2 railway line to northern England is intended to terminate at Euston Station.[37] The proposed Crossrail 2 line, (originally referred to as the Chelsea–Hackney line) would serve Euston and Tottenham Court Road underground stations. The increase in passengers at Euston as a result of the proposed High Speed 2 services is a major driver of the proposals.[38]

The formerly proposed Cross River Tram was going to start in the borough of Camden but was scrapped by the former Mayor of London Boris Johnson in 2008.[39]

Buses

All bus services are operated by Transport for London. Buses serve every suburb in the borough.

Statistics

The 2011 census found that the main forms of transport that residents used to travel to work were: underground, metro, light rail, tram, 21.5% of all residents aged 16–74; on foot, 9.2%; bus, minibus or coach, 9.2%; driving a car or van, 6.3%; work mainly at or from home, 5.2%; train, 4.1%; bicycle, 4.1%.[40]

The census also found that 61% of households had no car, 32% had one car and 7% of households had 2 or more cars. There were an estimated 46,000 cars belonging to Camden residents."Camden Borough Profile" (PDF).

Speed limit

From 16 December 2013, Camden Council introduced a borough-wide speed limit of 20 miles per hour (32 km/h), except on Transport for London red routes.[41][42] This is to make roads safer for cyclists and pedestrians.

See also

References

  1. ^ "The Mayor of Camden". London Borough of Camden. Retrieved 15 June 2023.
  2. ^ "2021 Census". London Borough of Camden. Retrieved 21 January 2023.
  3. ^ "camden - Definition, pictures, pronunciation and usage notes | Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary at OxfordLearnersDictionaries.com". www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com.
  4. ^ "Camden Council: About the Council". www.camden.gov.uk. Retrieved 28 July 2010.
  5. ^ Vision of Britain – Camden LB 27 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ Wistrich, Enid (1972). Local government reorganisation - the first years of Camden;. London: London Borough of Camden. pp. 30–32. ISBN 0901389137.
  7. ^ Mills, A., Oxford Dictionary of London Place Names, (2001)
  8. ^ Walford, E. (1878). "Camden Town and Kentish Town". Old and New London. Vol. 5. pp. 309–324.
  9. ^ Orchard, Stephen (ed.). The diary of William Copeland Astbury (1783-1868). The originals of the Astbury Diary are held in the Cheshunt Collection at Westminster College, Cambridge
  10. ^ "The Journal of William Copeland Astbury". Astbury Diary. Retrieved 4 June 2023.
  11. ^ a b https://www.london.gov.uk/in-my-area/camden Camden
  12. ^ "Search Blue Plaques". Blue plaques search – Camden. English Heritage. Retrieved 7 March 2018.
  13. ^ Atkins, Peter J. "How the West End was won: the struggle to remove street barriers in Victorian London." Journal of Historical Geography 19.3 (1993): 265.
  14. ^ How the West End was won: the struggle to remove street barriers in Victorian London. Atkins, P J. Journal of Historical Geography; London Vol. 19, Iss. 3, (Jul 1, 1993): 265.
  15. ^ "Improvements in a part of the borough they refer to as 'West End'" (PDF). London Borough of Camden.
  16. ^ Joanna Partridge (28 July 2020). "Google commits to vast London office despite rise of remote working". The Guardian.
  17. ^ "The London Plan 2016" (PDF). The London Assembly.
  18. ^ Article reporting Keir Starmer's victory in the Labour party leadership contest. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-52164589
  19. ^ "London's Poverty Profile". Trust for London. Retrieved 9 January 2018.
  20. ^ Camden Council – Camden Key Facts 2001–2016[permanent dead link]
  21. ^ "Open Data Portal". London Borough of Camden.
  22. ^ see the DFES Children Act report (2000); The Health Divide by Voluntary Action Camden; Health Inequalities in Camden Dr. Maggie Barker, a public Health Report; "Seen But Not Heard" an Audit Commission report based on research carried out mainly in Camden; and The Moral State We're In by Dame Julia Neuberger, former chair of Camden Community Health Services NHS Trust, et al.
  23. ^ "Ethnic minorities in Britain: statistical information on the pattern of settlement". Commission for Racial Equality: Table 2.2. 1985.
  24. ^ "1991 census – theme tables". NOMIS. Retrieved 20 January 2017.
  25. ^ "KS006 - Ethnic group". NOMIS. Retrieved 30 January 2016.
  26. ^ "Ethnic Group by measures". NOMIS. Retrieved 8 January 2016.
  27. ^ "Ethnic group - Office for National Statistics". www.ons.gov.uk. Retrieved 29 November 2022.
  28. ^ "KS007 - Religion - Nomis - 2001". www.nomisweb.co.uk. Retrieved 18 October 2022.
  29. ^ "KS209EW (Religion) - Nomis - 2011". www.nomisweb.co.uk. Retrieved 18 October 2022.
  30. ^ "Religion - 2021 census". Office of National Statistics. 29 November 2022. from the original on 29 November 2022. Retrieved 16 December 2022.
  31. ^ "Census products: Issues and corrections - Office for National Statistics".
  32. ^ "Latest updates".
  33. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 October 2008. Retrieved 9 July 2008.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) London Fire Brigade – Camden Profile
  34. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 October 2008.
  35. ^ "1846 Royal Commission".
  36. ^ Thameslink Programme: About the project 5 May 2010 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 27 July 2010
  37. ^ "Overview of changes at Euston station". HS2.
  38. ^ "HS2 warns it will not 'work properly' without Crossrail 2". Financial Times. 25 September 2017.
  39. ^ "TfL scraps projects and cuts jobs". 6 November 2008 – via news.bbc.co.uk.
  40. ^ "2011 Census: QS701EW Method of travel to work, local authorities in England and Wales". Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 23 November 2013. Percentages are of all residents aged 16–74 including those not in employment. Respondents could only pick one mode, specified as the journey’s longest part by distance.
  41. ^ . Camden Council. Archived from the original on 30 December 2013. Retrieved 30 December 2013.
  42. ^ "Speed limits – Camden Council". Camden Council. Retrieved 30 December 2013.

External links

  • Camden Town London website – News about the Camden Markets and Camden Town
  • Camden TV
  • Camden Town Online
  • WHO's Commission 2008 finding on the Social Determinants of Health finding re 'two Camdens' syndrome (3rd para)
  • Camden Council YouTube channel

51°32′N 0°10′W / 51.533°N 0.167°W / 51.533; -0.167

london, borough, camden, confused, with, camden, town, london, borough, inner, london, camden, town, hall, euston, road, lies, north, charing, cross, borough, established, april, 1965, from, area, former, boroughs, hampstead, holborn, pancras, which, prior, es. Not to be confused with Camden Town The London Borough of Camden ˈ k ae m d e n 3 is a London borough in Inner London Camden Town Hall on Euston Road lies 1 4 mi 2 3 km north of Charing Cross The borough was established on 1 April 1965 from the area of the former boroughs of Hampstead Holborn and St Pancras which prior to its establishment had comprised part of the historic County of London London Borough of CamdenBoroughFrom the top left Top Camden Lock railway bridge St PancrasMiddle BT Tower the British MuseumBottom Granary Square Kenwood HouseCoat of armsCouncil logoMotto s Non sibi sed toti Not for self but for all Camden shown within Greater LondonSovereign stateUnited KingdomConstituent countryEnglandRegionLondonCeremonial countyGreater LondonCreated1 April 1965Admin HQTown Hall Judd Street St Pancras LondonGovernment TypeLondon borough council BodyCamden London Borough Council LeadershipLeader amp Cabinet Labour MayorCouncillor Nazma Rahman 1 London AssemblyAnne Clarke Lab AM for Barnet and Camden MPsKeir Starmer Lab Tulip Siddiq Lab Area Total8 4 sq mi 21 8 km2 Rank308th of 309 Population 2021 Total210 1361 Rank87th of 309 Density24 970 sq mi 9 641 km2 Rank9th of 309 Time zoneUTC GMT Summer DST UTC 1 BST PostcodesEC N NW W WCArea code020GSS codeE09000007PoliceMetropolitan PoliceWebsitecamden gov uk1 There are concerns about the accuracy of this data 2 The cultural and commercial land uses in the south contrast with the bustling mixed use districts such as Camden Town and Kentish Town in the centre and leafy residential areas around Hampstead Heath in the north Well known attractions include The British Museum The British Library the famous views from Parliament Hill the London Zoo the BT Tower The Roundhouse and Camden Market As of 2021 it has a population of 210 136 The local authority is Camden London Borough Council 4 Contents 1 History 2 Geography and economy 3 Governance and politics 3 1 Local government 3 2 London Assembly 3 3 UK Parliament 4 Demographics 4 1 Ethnicity 4 2 Religion 5 Landmarks 5 1 Parks and open spaces 5 2 Attractions 6 Education 6 1 Primary schools 6 2 Major public and private bodies 7 Public services 7 1 Police 7 2 London Fire Brigade 7 3 Public libraries 8 Transport 8 1 Rail 8 1 1 National Rail 8 1 2 Underground 8 1 3 Future 8 2 Buses 8 3 Statistics 8 4 Speed limit 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksHistory Edit Former Camden Town market 2011 was demolished in early 2015 to make room for the Hawley Wharf redevelopment project The borough was created in 1965 from the areas of the former metropolitan boroughs of Hampstead Holborn and St Pancras which had formed part of the County of London 5 The initial Herbert Commission report recommended that the new borough consist of St Pancras and Hampstead but Holborn was later added According to Enid Wistrich who was a member of Hampstead Council at the time the name Camden was the idea of Alderman Room the Leader of Hampstead Council and Mr Wilson the Town Clerk while travelling in a taxi through Camden Town The name Fleet had also been suggested after the underground river that flowed through the three boroughs but that was rejected as the river was little more than a sewer Other suggestions included Penhamborn Bornhamcras and Hohampion Government guidelines for the naming of the new boroughs suggested that the chosen name should be short and simple and ideally one that was generally associated with the centre of the new Borough The name Camden met those criteria 6 The name Camden Town was derived from Camden Place the seat of Charles Pratt 1st Earl Camden who had owned and developed land in the area in the 1790s 7 8 The transcribed diaries of William Copeland Astbury recently made available describe Camden and the surrounding areas in great detail from 1829 1848 9 10 There are 162 English Heritage blue plaques 11 in the borough of Camden representing the many diverse personalities that have lived there 12 Geography and economy EditFor a full list of districts and neighbourhoods of Camden see List of districts in Camden The borough was formed in 1965 by the merger of the metropolitan boroughs of St Pancras Hampstead and Holborn The first two of these had their origins in medieval Ancient Parishes of the same name while Holborn was formed by a union of much smaller units The area of the old parish and borough of Hampstead in the north west includes Belsize Park and part of Kilburn The old parish and borough of St Pancras which occupies most of the modern borough includes Camden Town Kentish Town Gospel Oak Somers Town King s Cross Chalk Farm Dartmouth Park the core area of Fitzrovia and a part of Highgate The Ancient Parishes of west to east Paddington and St Marylebone in the modern City of Westminster and St Pancras in the modern London Borough of Camden in 1834 In the south the old Borough of Holborn was formed from the combined parish of Bloomsbury and St Giles and most of the parish of Holborn with the remaining part in the ancient Farringdon Without ward of the City of London The economy and land uses of the West End 13 14 15 and other southern parts of the borough reflect their more central location Camden has the seventh largest economy in the UK 11 with a number of major companies headquartered in the borough Google is in the process of completing a major headquarter building in King s Cross 16 Camden Town Brewery is among the newer businesses that have thrived in the borough In the far south of the borough Lincoln s Inn Fields is within 500 metres of the Thames The northern part of the borough includes the less densely developed areas of Hampstead Hampstead Heath and Kentish Town There are a number of Parks and open spaces in the London Borough of Camden Neighbouring boroughs are the City of Westminster and the City of London to the south Brent to the west of the originally Roman Watling Street now the A5 Road Barnet and Haringey to the north and Islington to the east It covers all or part of the N1 N6 N7 N19 NW1 NW2 NW3 NW5 NW6 NW8 EC1 WC1 WC2 W1 and W9 postcode areas For planning policy purposes the London Plan places Camden in the Central London group of boroughs 17 Governance and politics EditLocal government Edit See also Camden London Borough Council and Camden local elections A map showing the wards of Camden since 2022 Camden Town Hall is located in Judd Street in St Pancras Camden London Borough Council was controlled by the Labour Party continuously from 1971 until the 2006 election when the Liberal Democrats became the largest party In 2006 two Green Cllrs Maya de Souza and Adrian Oliver were elected to Highgate Ward and were the first Green Party councillors in Camden In 1985 when the borough was rate capped the Labour leadership joined the rebellion in which it declared its inability to set a budget in an unsuccessful attempt to force the Government to allow higher spending Camden was the fourth to last council to drop out of the campaign doing so in the early hours of 6 June Borough councillors are elected every four years Since May 2022 the electoral wards in Camden are Belsize Bloomsbury Camden Square Fortune Green Frognal Gospel Oak Hampstead Town Haverstock Highgate Holborn and Covent Garden Kentish Town North Kentish Town South Kilburn King s Cross Primrose Hill Regent s Park St Pancras and Somers Town and West Hampstead Between 2006 and 2010 Labour lost two seats to the Liberal Democrats through by elections in Kentish Town and Haverstock wards A Labour Councillor in Haverstock ward also defected to the Liberal Democrats in February 2009 The Conservatives also lost two seats one to the Liberal Democrats in Hampstead and one to the Green Party Alexander Goodman in Highgate taking the total number of Green Party Councillors to three At the local elections on 6 May 2010 the Labour party regained full control of Camden council The organisation s staff are led by the Chief Executive who is currently Jenny Rowlands The organisation is divided into three directorates Supporting People Supporting Communities Corporate ServicesThe directorates are headed by an Executive Director who reports directly to the Chief Executive Each directorate is divided into a number of divisions headed by a Director They in turn are divided into groups which are themselves divided into services This is a similar model to most local government in London London Assembly Edit Camden forms part of the Barnet and Camden London Assembly constituency represented by Anne Clarke of the Labour Party UK Parliament Edit There are two parliamentary constituencies covering Camden Hampstead and Kilburn in the north represented by Labour s Tulip Siddiq and Holborn and St Pancras in the south represented by Keir Starmer the leader of the Labour Party 18 Demographics Edit Population pyramid of the Borough of Camden in 2021 PopulationYearPop 180196 795 1811124 741 28 9 1821158 077 26 7 1831192 228 21 6 1841228 950 19 1 1851270 197 18 0 1861301 408 11 6 1871332 619 10 4 1881363 830 9 4 1891376 500 3 5 1901362 581 3 7 1911349 184 3 7 1921335 408 3 9 1931322 212 3 9 1941286 956 10 9 1951255 558 10 9 1961231 143 9 6 1971209 097 9 5 1981161 100 23 0 1991181 489 12 7 2001198 027 9 1 2011220 338 11 3 2021210 136 4 6 Source A Vision of Britain through time and the ONSIn 1801 the civil parishes that form the modern borough were already developed and had a total population of 96 795 This continued to rise swiftly throughout the 19th century as the district became built up reaching 270 197 in the middle of the century When the railways arrived the rate of population growth slowed for while many people were drawn in by new employment others were made homeless by the new central London termini and construction of lines through the district The population peaked at 376 500 in the 1890s after which official efforts began to clear the overcrowded slums around St Pancras and Holborn After World War II further suburban public housing was built to rehouse the many Londoners made homeless in the Blitz and there was an exodus from London towards the new towns under the Abercrombie Plan for London 1944 As industry declined during the 1970s the population continued to decline falling to 161 100 at the start of the 1980s It has now begun to rise again with new housing developments on brownfield sites and the release of railway and gas work lands around Kings Cross A 2017 study found that the eviction rate of 6 per 1 000 renting households in Camden is the lowest rate in London 19 The 2001 census gave Camden a population of 198 000 an undercount that was later revised to 202 600 20 The latest ONS projection puts the 2019 population at 270 000 21 On 20 May 1999 the Camden New Journal newspaper documented Two Camdens syndrome as a high profile phenomenon differentiating the characteristics of education services in its constituencies In 2006 Dame Julia Neuberger s book reported similar variation as a characteristic of Camden s children s health services Her insider s view was corroboration in addition to the 2001 Inequalities report by Director of Public Health Dr Maggie Barker of stark contrasts in health and education opportunities of earlier similar Audit Commission findings and a verification update of the 1999 CNJ report 22 Ethnicity Edit The following table shows the ethnic group of respondents in the 2001 and 2011 census in Camden Ethnic group 1981 estimations 23 1991 24 2001 25 2011 26 2021 27 Number Number Number Number Number White Total 135 004 89 2 140 026 82 15 144 896 73 17 146 055 66 29 125 064 59 6 White British 104 390 52 72 96 937 43 99 74 348 35 4 White Irish 9 149 4 62 7 053 3 20 5 325 2 5 White Gypsy or Irish Traveller 167 0 08 128 0 1 White Roma 978 0 5 White Other 31 357 15 84 41 898 19 02 44 285 21 1 Asian or Asian British Total 16 204 9 5 24 021 12 13 35 446 16 09 38 042 18 1 Asian or Asian British Indian 2 867 1 68 4 574 2 31 6 083 2 76 6 952 3 3 Asian or Asian British Pakistani 760 0 44 1 250 0 63 1 489 0 68 1 610 0 8 Asian or Asian British Bangladeshi 6 021 3 5 12 569 6 35 12 503 5 67 14 356 6 8 Asian or Asian British Chinese 2 633 1 54 3 470 1 75 6 493 2 95 6 728 3 2 Asian or Asian British Other Asian 3 923 2 3 2 158 1 09 8 878 4 03 8 396 4 0 Black or Black British Total 9 394 5 5 16 374 8 27 18 060 8 20 18 892 9 1 Black or Black British African 4 643 2 72 11 795 5 96 10 802 4 90 14 191 6 8 Black or Black British Caribbean 3 054 1 79 3 635 1 84 3 496 1 59 2 703 1 3 Black or Black British Other Black 1 697 1 944 0 48 3 762 1 71 1 998 1 0 Mixed or British Mixed Total 7 429 3 75 12 322 5 59 13 938 6 6 Mixed White and Black Caribbean 1 654 0 84 2 494 1 13 2 558 1 2 Mixed White and Black African 1 224 0 62 1 800 0 82 2 059 1 0 Mixed White and Asian 1 983 1 00 3 880 1 76 4 243 2 0 Mixed Other Mixed 2 568 1 30 4 148 1 88 5 078 2 4 Other Total 4 820 2 8 5 300 2 68 8 455 3 84 14 200 6 8 Other Arab 3 432 1 56 4 417 2 1 Other Any other ethnic group 4 820 2 8 5 300 2 68 5 023 2 28 9 783 4 7 Ethnic minority Total 16 303 10 8 30 418 17 8 53 124 26 83 74 283 33 71 85 072 40 4 Total 151 307 100 170 444 100 198 020 100 220 338 100 210 136 100 Religion Edit Religious makeup of Camden by single year age groups in 2021 The following shows the religious identity of residents residing in Camden according to the 2001 2011 and the 2021 censuses Religion 2001 28 2011 29 2021 30 Number Number Number Holds religious beliefs 134 545 67 9 118 949 54 0 118 581 56 4Christian 93 259 47 1 74 821 34 0 65 980 31 4Muslim 22 906 11 6 26 643 12 1 33 830 16 1Jewish 11 153 5 6 9 823 4 5 10 079 4 8Hindu 3 031 1 5 3 141 1 4 3 991 1 9Sikh 443 0 2 465 0 2 487 0 2Buddhist 2 595 1 3 2 789 1 3 2 410 1 1Other religion 1 161 0 6 1 267 0 6 1 842 0 9No religion 43 609 22 0 56 113 25 5 72 776 34 6Religion not stated 19 866 10 0 45 276 20 5 18 743 8 9Total population 198 020 100 0 220 338 100 0 210 100 100 0Note The number of residents in the Religion not stated category in 2011 was overestimated due to an error processing the 2011 census data 31 Landmarks EditParks and open spaces Edit Main article Parks and open spaces in the London Borough of Camden London is well known for its greenery and the Parks and open spaces in the London Borough of Camden make an important contribution to this Hampstead Heath is well known for its view over London notably from Parliament Hill its wild nature and its Hampstead Heath Ponds Camden shares Regents Park with Westminster and the views from Primrose Hill are famous Attractions Edit Bloomsbury Theatre BT Tower Camden Arts Centre Camden catacombs see also Catacombs of London Camden Market Parts of Covent Garden Dickens House Dominion Theatre Drama Centre London Euston station Fenton House Foundling Museum Freud Museum Grant Museum of Zoology Gray s Inn Hampstead Cemetery Hampstead Heath Hatton Garden Highgate Cemetery Jewish Museum London Keats House Kenwood House King s Cross railway station Lincoln s Inn Parliament Hill Lido Phoenix Garden The eastern part of Regent s Park is in the borough The Place The Roundhouse Russell Square Shaftesbury Theatre Sir John Soane s Museum Upstairs at The Gatehouse World s End Camden London Zoo London Astoria Electric Ballroom Wellcome Collection Primrose Hill St Pancras Library St Pancras railway stationEducation EditThe Borough of Camden is home to a large number of primary secondary and tertiary institutions Over recent years a number of significant institutions have moved into the borough or are planning to do so The included Central Saint Martins the Francis Crick Institute as well as the planned move by Moorfields Eye Hospital recently unveiled as Project Oriel 32 Primary schools Edit See also List of schools in Camden The London Borough of Camden is the local education authority for the borough organised through the Children Schools and Families directorate Major public and private bodies Edit Some of London s best universities and teaching institutions are located in the Borough of Camden They include the main campus of University College London part of the campus of the London School of Economics near Lincoln s Inn Fields and Central Saint Martins The Architectural Association Birkbeck University of London The British Library British Medical Association The British Museum Cancer Research UK Central Saint Martins Fordham University London Centre Francis Crick Institute Friends House Great Ormond Street Hospital Goodenough College London School of Hygiene amp Tropical Medicine part of University of London National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery National Union of Students Royal Academy of Dramatic Art Royal Central School of Speech and Drama Royal College of Anaesthetists Royal College of General Practitioners Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health Royal College of Physicians Royal College of Surgeons Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons Royal Free Hospital Royal Veterinary College Camden Campus Senate House University of London School of Oriental and African Studies Slade School of Fine Art St Pancras Hospital Student Central Trades Union Congress TUC University College Hospital University College London The University of Law University of London Union Wellcome Trust Working Men s CollegePublic services EditPolice Edit Camden is policed by the Metropolitan Police Service There are two police stations across the borough situated at Holborn and Kentish Town There are various other contact points around the borough including West Hampstead Greenland Road Highgate Road Station House Swiss Cottage West End Lane Hampstead Town Hall and Kingsway College All locations have varying opening hours with Kentish Town Police Station open to the public on a 24 hour basis Hampstead Heath situated within the London Borough of Camden and managed by the City of London Corporation has its own Constabulary who deal with everyday incidents on the Heath however all serious criminal offences are passed to the Metropolitan Police to investigate With a large London Underground network and major railway stations such as King s Cross St Pancras and Euston Camden also has a much larger presence of British Transport Police BTP than many other London boroughs BTP are responsible for policing Great Britain s railway network London Fire Brigade Edit The area has three fire stations Euston Kentish Town and West Hampstead and they are operated by London Fire Brigade in the borough of Camden None of these fire stations are home to any specialist units only pumping appliances and a rescue tender 33 34 Public libraries Edit Camden is the home of the British Library In addition Camden has numerous libraries which include Swiss Cottage Library Holborn Library Camden Town Library Kentish Town Library Pancras Square Library West Hampstead Library Kilburn Library Highgate Library Queens Crescent LibraryAs well as a number of community libraries including Keats community library Transport Edit View of the railway bridge over Camden High St which carries the North London Line St Pancras International home to Eurostar trains King s Cross St Pancras tube station served by the most tube lines on the network There are no motorways in the borough and few stretches of dual carriageway road but the borough has great strategic transport significance to London due to presence of three of the capital s most important rail termini which are lined up along the Euston Road The position of the railway termini on Euston Road rather than in a more central position further south is a result of the influential recommendations of the 1846 Royal Commission on Metropolitan Railway Termini that sought to protect the West End districts a short distance south of the road 35 Rail Edit National Rail Edit Three of the fourteen central London s railway terminals are located in the borough Euston St Pancras and Kings Cross are the London termini for the West Coast Midland and East Coast Main Lines and also High Speed 1 This connects the borough with the East of England East Midlands West Midlands North East amp West England North Wales Scotland South East England France Belgium and the Netherlands Since 14 November 2007 when St Pancras International became the new terminus of Eurostar a major regeneration of the area has occurred with the King s Cross Central development happening behind the station London Overground s North London Line services run through the borough serving Camden Road Kentish Town West Gospel Oak Hampstead Heath Finchley Road amp Frognal and West Hampstead London Overground also operates the Watford DC Line services from Euston serving South Hampstead trains continue to Watford in Hertfordshire Thameslink route services serve St Pancras Kentish Town and West Hampstead Thameslink stations Currently the Thameslink network is undergoing a major expansion project called the Thameslink Programme This will link more places in Southern England to the borough and to the East of England While some services on the Great Northern network which currently terminate at King s Cross will be diverted onto the Thameslink network all work is due to be complete by 2016 36 Underground Edit The London Borough of Camden is served by 18 London Underground stations and 8 of the 11 lines The three major rail termini are served by two underground stations Euston and the combined King s Cross St Pancras station Between them the termini are served by the Circle Hammersmith amp City Metropolitan Northern Piccadilly and Victoria lines The Central and Jubilee lines serve other parts of the borough as does the Elizabeth line As well as the two major termini stations the borough s other stations are Euston Square Warren Street Goodge Street Tottenham Court Road Holborn Russell Square Chancery Lane Mornington Crescent Camden Town Chalk Farm Belsize Park Hampstead West Hampstead Finchley Road Swiss Cottage and Kentish Town Future Edit The proposed High Speed 2 railway line to northern England is intended to terminate at Euston Station 37 The proposed Crossrail 2 line originally referred to as the Chelsea Hackney line would serve Euston and Tottenham Court Road underground stations The increase in passengers at Euston as a result of the proposed High Speed 2 services is a major driver of the proposals 38 The formerly proposed Cross River Tram was going to start in the borough of Camden but was scrapped by the former Mayor of London Boris Johnson in 2008 39 Buses Edit All bus services are operated by Transport for London Buses serve every suburb in the borough Statistics Edit The 2011 census found that the main forms of transport that residents used to travel to work were underground metro light rail tram 21 5 of all residents aged 16 74 on foot 9 2 bus minibus or coach 9 2 driving a car or van 6 3 work mainly at or from home 5 2 train 4 1 bicycle 4 1 40 The census also found that 61 of households had no car 32 had one car and 7 of households had 2 or more cars There were an estimated 46 000 cars belonging to Camden residents Camden Borough Profile PDF Speed limit Edit From 16 December 2013 Camden Council introduced a borough wide speed limit of 20 miles per hour 32 km h except on Transport for London red routes 41 42 This is to make roads safer for cyclists and pedestrians See also Edit London portalCamden Head Camden benchReferences Edit The Mayor of Camden London Borough of Camden Retrieved 15 June 2023 2021 Census London Borough of Camden Retrieved 21 January 2023 camden Definition pictures pronunciation and usage notes Oxford Advanced Learner s Dictionary at OxfordLearnersDictionaries com www oxfordlearnersdictionaries com Camden Council About the Council www camden gov uk Retrieved 28 July 2010 Vision of Britain Camden LB Archived 27 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine Wistrich Enid 1972 Local government reorganisation the first years of Camden London London Borough of Camden pp 30 32 ISBN 0901389137 Mills A Oxford Dictionary of London Place Names 2001 Walford E 1878 Camden Town and Kentish Town Old and New London Vol 5 pp 309 324 Orchard Stephen ed The diary of William Copeland Astbury 1783 1868 The originals of the Astbury Diary are held in the Cheshunt Collection at Westminster College Cambridge The Journal of William Copeland Astbury Astbury Diary Retrieved 4 June 2023 a b https www london gov uk in my area camden Camden Search Blue Plaques Blue plaques search Camden English Heritage Retrieved 7 March 2018 Atkins Peter J How the West End was won the struggle to remove street barriers in Victorian London Journal of Historical Geography 19 3 1993 265 How the West End was won the struggle to remove street barriers in Victorian London Atkins P J Journal of Historical Geography London Vol 19 Iss 3 Jul 1 1993 265 Improvements in a part of the borough they refer to as West End PDF London Borough of Camden Joanna Partridge 28 July 2020 Google commits to vast London office despite rise of remote working The Guardian The London Plan 2016 PDF The London Assembly Article reporting Keir Starmer s victory in the Labour party leadership contest https www bbc co uk news uk politics 52164589 London s Poverty Profile Trust for London Retrieved 9 January 2018 Camden Council Camden Key Facts 2001 2016 permanent dead link Open Data Portal London Borough of Camden see the DFES Children Act report 2000 The Health Divide by Voluntary Action Camden Health Inequalities in Camden Dr Maggie Barker a public Health Report Seen But Not Heard an Audit Commission report based on research carried out mainly in Camden and The Moral State We re In by Dame Julia Neuberger former chair of Camden Community Health Services NHS Trust et al Ethnic minorities in Britain statistical information on the pattern of settlement Commission for Racial Equality Table 2 2 1985 1991 census theme tables NOMIS Retrieved 20 January 2017 KS006 Ethnic group NOMIS Retrieved 30 January 2016 Ethnic Group by measures NOMIS Retrieved 8 January 2016 Ethnic group Office for National Statistics www ons gov uk Retrieved 29 November 2022 KS007 Religion Nomis 2001 www nomisweb co uk Retrieved 18 October 2022 KS209EW Religion Nomis 2011 www nomisweb co uk Retrieved 18 October 2022 Religion 2021 census Office of National Statistics 29 November 2022 Archived from the original on 29 November 2022 Retrieved 16 December 2022 Census products Issues and corrections Office for National Statistics Latest updates Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 3 October 2008 Retrieved 9 July 2008 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link London Fire Brigade Camden Profile London Fire Brigade Camden Profile PDF Archived from the original PDF on 3 October 2008 1846 Royal Commission Thameslink Programme About the project Archived 5 May 2010 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 27 July 2010 Overview of changes at Euston station HS2 HS2 warns it will not work properly without Crossrail 2 Financial Times 25 September 2017 TfL scraps projects and cuts jobs 6 November 2008 via news bbc co uk 2011 Census QS701EW Method of travel to work local authorities in England and Wales Office for National Statistics Retrieved 23 November 2013 Percentages are of all residents aged 16 74 including those not in employment Respondents could only pick one mode specified as the journey s longest part by distance 20mph speed limit in Camden Camden Council Camden Council Archived from the original on 30 December 2013 Retrieved 30 December 2013 Speed limits Camden Council Camden Council Retrieved 30 December 2013 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to London Borough of Camden Camden Town London website News about the Camden Markets and Camden Town The website of Camden Council Camden TV Camden Town Online WHO s Commission 2008 finding on the Social Determinants of Health finding re two Camdens syndrome 3rd para Camden Council YouTube channel 51 32 N 0 10 W 51 533 N 0 167 W 51 533 0 167 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title London Borough of Camden amp oldid 1160460410, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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