Riots to riches: gentrification sparks fears for Brixton's soul
Once-infamous area now lures the young and affluent, inflating property prices and forcing grandchildren of West Indian immigrants out

The small champagne bar faces the stall selling Afro-Caribbean produce, a stone's throw from the scene of some of London's worst riots. Welcome to Brixton, the once-infamous district transformed by gentrification.
Along the roads where hordes of young black men battled police in 1981, wine bars and sushi restaurants have flourished, squats have been cleared and houses are now selling for more than £1 million (HK$12.5 million).
But not everyone is enjoying the good times in this once poor and crime-ridden pocket of south London, located a 15-minute subway journey from the city centre.
"I fear that in 10 to 15 years' time, Brixton will go the same way as Notting Hill where it becomes a totally middle-class area," said Alex Wheatle, one of the rioters who has written several novels about the district.
He said house prices were now so high that the grandchildren of the original West Indian immigrants who gave Brixton its distinct culture were now moving elsewhere.