Why I live in Mile End: actor Nabil Elouahabi on his vibrant, green east London area

Top Boy and Blue Lights actor Nabil Elouahabi reveals what he loves most about his vibrant and fun East End community.
Nabil Elouahabi in Victoria Park
Matt Writtle
Ruth Bloomfield5 May 2023

I was born and bred in west London, around Ladbroke Grove, but I moved east in 2014 and I am so glad I did.

I love Mile End — it reminds me of what west London used to be like before it became wealthy and gentrified, and the tapestry of community seemed to fray. When wealth comes, lots of walls and gates and fences seem to come with it. When I moved to east London, I felt that community again.

The other thing I love about Mile End is that it is not Shoreditch, I am not into all that chaos.

Eating and drinking

Victoria Park, London with it's Pavilion Cafe and lake
The Pavilion café in Victoria Park is one of Nabil’s favourites
Alamy Stock Photo

There are so many places that you are spoiled for choice, but my day-to-day is the Pavilion café in Victoria Park, for delicious coffee and cakes and a bit of people-watching. I also like The Coffee Room on Grove Road, which is a really old-school, Italian-owned place where they know you by name.

Mae + Harvey on Roman Road is another favourite, healthy and tasty, and owned by Tasha, the hardest-working woman I’ve ever met.

I have not drunk for a couple of years, but I would recommend Satan’s Whiskers on Cambridge Heath Road, which has the best non-alcoholic cocktails for me, while my beloved sips something a bit stronger.

Where I work out

I am a ridiculously early riser, like 5am to 5.30am, and I like to take my yoga mat to Victoria Park and work out under the stars, where there’s also monkey bars and things like that to use.

I joined Fightzone London on Pritchard’s Road about a year ago. I love that place. It does mixed martial arts, and it feels a bit like a family.

The climbing wall at Mile End Park
Matt Writtle

There is also a climbing wall at Mile End Park, which some of my friends use and I have been tempted by.

To commune with nature

I love walking along the Regent’s Canal, all the way to the Limehouse Basin, and often I will jump on my bike and cycle along the canal to Upper Street.

The calm of Regent’s Canal
Matt Writtle

Grocery shopping

I am a fan of a market and Roman Road Market has some really good Turkish stalls for fruit and vegetables. And on Saturdays and Sundays there is a really good organic market in Victoria Park.

For a culture fix

Genesis Cinema offers £5 tickets
Matt Writtle

Rich Mix on Bethnal Green Road is doing some really great things.

And I’ve got to talk about Genesis Cinema, which is this independent cinema on Mile End Road. The owner is Tyrone Walker-Hebborn and he offers £5 tickets because he really wants to get people back into the cinema, and I love that.

Getting around

Bike is my preferred mode of transport. If we are filming in east London I often cycle to set, and I can be in the West End in half an hour. But I do love the Elizabeth line. I can get from Whitechapel to Tottenham Court Road in something ridiculous like eight minutes.

Cycling is Nabil’s favourite way to get around
Matt Writtle

Dream street

I love Tredegar Square, and all around there. I like all the gorgeous old houses; they seem like they’d be really spacious.

Something you only see in Mile End

On Saturday Roman Road Market is an absolute delight. There is a South Asian food truck, Home Made Delights, run by a family, which I really recommend.

Tredegar Square, one of London’s finest examples of Georgian elegance
Matt Writtle

What’s the catch?

I don’t drive any more but don’t like how they are closing off all the side roads so that all the traffic is funnelled into the main roads. How is cars idling good for the environment?

In three words

Vibrant, green space, fun.

Nabil Elouahabi is currently filming season two of the thriller Trigger Point alongside Vicky McClure. Catch up with season one on ITVX.

Schools

Most local primary schools hold “good” Ofsted reports. For older students, Central Foundation Girls’ School is also rated good by the schools’ watchdog, as is the Stepney Green Mathematics and Computing College for pupils keen on numbers and tech.

This isn’t really private-school territory, but the high-performing City of London School is three miles west.

What it costs

Buying in Mile End

Average flat price: £424,550

Average house price: £892,430

Renting in Mile End

Average one-bed rent: £1,500 pcm

Average three-bed rent: £2,840 pcm

Source: Hamptons & Land Registry

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