Under The Arches At Three Colts Lane
Situated midway between Spitalfields and Bethnal Green lies Three Colts Lane. Although many years have passed since there were colts here, today there are many other attractions to make this a compelling destination, especially if you are having problems with your car – because Three Colts Lane is where all the motor repair garages are to be found, gathered together in dozens and snuggled up close together in ramshackle order. Who can say how many repair shops there are in Three Colts Lane? – since they inhabit the railway arches in the manner of interconnected troglodyte dwellings carved into a mountain, no-one can tell where one garage begins and another ends.
Three Colts Lane is where the lines from the East and the North converge as they approach Liverpool St Station, providing a deep warren of vaulted spaces, extended by shambolic tin shacks and bordered with scruffy yards fenced off with corrugated iron. Here in this forgotten niche, while more fences and signs are added, few have ever been removed, creating a dense visual patchwork to fascinate the eye. Yet even before I arrived in Three Colts Lane, the commingled scents of engine oil and spray paint were drawing me closer with their intoxicating fragrance, because, although I have no car, I love to come here to explore this distinct corner of the East End that is a world of its own.
Each body shop presents a cavernous entrance, from which the sounds of banging and clanging and shouting emanate, every one attended by the employees, distinguished by their boiler suits and oily hands, happily enjoying cigarettes in the sun. Yet standing in the daylight and peering into the gloom, it is impossible to discern the relative size and shape of these garages that all appear to recede infinitely into the darkness beneath the railway arches. An investigation was necessary, and so I invited Contributing Photographer Sarah Ainslie to join me in my quest to explore this mysterious parallel universe that goes by the name of Three Colts Lane. And many delights awaited us, because at each garage we were welcomed by the mechanics, eager to have their pictures taken and show us the manifold splendours of their manor.
There is a cheerful spirit of anarchy that presides in Three Colts Lane, incarnated by the senior mechanic with his upper body under a taxicab, who, when we asked gingerly if we might take pictures of the extravagantly vaulted narrow old repair shop deep beneath the arches, declared,“It’s not my garage. Do as you please! Make yourself at home!” To outsiders, these dark grimy spaces might appear alien, but to those who work here it is a zone where everyone knows everyone else, and where you can spend your working life in a society with its own codes, hierarchy and respect – only encountering the outside world through the motorists and cabbies that arrive needing repairs. My father was a mechanic, and I recognise the liberation of filth, how being dirty in your work sets you apart from others’ expectations. The layers of grime and dirt here – in an environment comprised almost exclusively of small businesses where no-one wears a white collar – speak eloquently of a place that is a law unto itself.
Starting at the Eastern end of Three Colts Lane, the first person we met was Lofty, proprietor of the A1 Car Centre, who proved to be a gracious ambassador for the territory. “Some garages, they just want to take the money,” Lofty declared in wonder, his chestnut-brown eyes glinting with righteous ire at the injustice – like a sheriff denouncing outlaws – before he pledged his own personal doctrine of decency, “But I believe it’s how you treat the customers that’s the most important thing, that’s why we are still here after twenty-five years.” And proof that Lofty is as good as his word was evident recently when seven hundred customers signed a petition saving the garage from developers who threatened to build student housing on the site.
We crossed the road to shake hands with Nicky at the Coborn Garage, admiring the fresh and gaudy patriotic colour scheme of red, white and blue, and his decorative signwriting that would not be out-of-place on a gipsy caravan. Under the railway bridge and down the road, we encountered Erdal and his nephew at Repairs R Us, where we marvelled at the monster engine from a Volvo truck that Erdal rebuilt and today keeps as a trophy by the entrance of his tiny arch. Further down, we met Ahmed, a native of Cyprus who grew up above the synagogue in Heneage St and has run his garage here for twenty-eight years. At the corner, across from Bethnal Green Station, we were greeted by Ian & Trevor, two softly spoken brothers who have been here twenty years repairing taxis in a former a scrap yard, still retaining its old weighbridge. We all squinted together at the drain pipe head dated 1870 with the initials of the Great Eastern Railway upon it, declaring the history of the site in gothic capitals, before Ian extracted a promise from me to come back once I had discovered the origin of the name Three Colts Lane.
Apart from calendar girls adorning the walls, the only women we glimpsed were those who restricted themselves to answering the telephone – barely visible in tiny cabins of domestic comfort, sheltering their femininity against the barbaric male chaos of the machine shops. But then, strolling down a back lane and passing one of the governors in a heated altercation with a quivering cabbie who had innocently scraped his Daimler, thereby providing the catalyst for an arresting display of bullish masculinity, we encountered Ilfet. With a triumphant mixture of self-assurance and sharp humour, Ilfet has won the respect of her male colleagues in the body shop, wielding a spanner as well as the next man. A bold pioneer in her field and stirling example to others, I was proud to shake the hand of Ilfet, the only – or rather – the first female mechanic in Three Colts Lane.
Growing bolder, we ventured deeper to discover the paint shops and frames where taxis were hoisted up for major surgery. We left daylight behind us to explore the furthest recesses of the dripping vaults, lined with corrugated iron, where a fluorescent glow pervaded the scene of lurid-coloured motors crouching in the gloom. We had arrived at the heart of Three Colts Lane, vibrating to the diabolic roar of the high speed trains passing overhead, whisking passengers in and out of London, oblivious to the hidden world beneath the tracks.
Photographs copyright © Sarah Ainslie
You may also like to read about
Wonderful and authentic photos of people who work hard for a living, and I am glad to see that workshops like this still exist. Good luck to all who toil there under the arches, and who are not afraid to get their fingers dirty. Valerie
great article, good to know they’re there!
Arches are important for two reasons they support many businesses’ also during WW.2 they ‘saved lives’, they deserve a big mention. Many a Londoner caught out on the streets during an air raid would take shelter in them. This wartime scene was horrific for the people, bombed buildings were on fire and falling, many pavements were cluttered with falling debris. When the protective anti aircraft gun batteries opened up shrapnel rained down. There were actual cases of Luftwaffe incendiary bombs striking those on the streets. PS Most were railway arches more is known about deep under underground stations supporting large communities as air raid shelters. John
I love to view “work spaces” of all kinds — so this posting had an extra layer of enjoyment —- in addition to seeing these hard-working, earnest, and proficient folks hip-deep in their tasks.
I so enjoyed this behind-the-scenes look. Every inch of your region is fascinating; with an amazing cast of characters. Thanks for bringing us inside your world.
I used to live in Corfield St and remember all the garages under the arches. All the way along Three Colts Lane between Finnis St and Wilmot St, the first one was where all the taxis were kept for repairing. Took me right back to when I was a child and passed by the arches every day going to school. This article brought back so many lovely memories.
More happy memories for me as my father was a motor mechanic and I spent many hours in the workshop of the small garage where he was employed. The owner was a lovely man and would often ask me to tidy his office for a bit of pocket money, it was just as well that I was honest as he was so forgetful that in amongst all the paper, bills, tools, and masses of other stuff, bits of rubber and paint tins and everything else that littered his desk, I always found a lot of money. Customers would pay him cash for work done which he then, absentmindedly, just put down amongst all the other untidy litter. And the smell of the petrol and oil, perhaps I became addicted to it because I still love it now. Thank you GA.
Another intersting article of our London of life we just do not think of. These hard working people are to be praised, for working in these arches looks cold and dismal but the people aren’t! and they are a well needed part of our great City . Just imagine what goings in these Archies have seen. ‘If walls could talk!’ They must have come in very useful during the WW’s to get away from the bombs. Many of them have been modernized now with glass fronted windows and a lick of paint. One of the things that fascinates me each time I drive through London are the Archies, I look at them in wonder, tooked away hiding only what they know. Thank you for sharing. And thank you to you all who work in them and keep the alive!
This was great! I enjoyed seeing regular people going about their lives… this is what I love about your blog! Thanks for all the wonderful shots of smiling faces as well as their workplaces.
Excellent article as ever, but I think it is about time someone took a photo of the Gentle Author and Sarah Ainslie!