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Petticoat Lane Market is a fashion and clothing market in Spitalfields, London. It consists of two adjacent street markets. It consists of two adjacent street markets. Wentworth Street Market is open six days a week [ 1 ] and Middlesex Street Market is open on Sunday only.
The market square is a popular fashion, arts and crafts, food and general market, open seven days a week, but is particularly busy at weekends. Operationally, the area is run as two adjacent marketplaces: Old Spitalfields Market to the east, [7] and the 1926 extension of Spitalfields Market to the west. [8]
New Spitalfields Market is a fruit and vegetable market on a 31-acre (13 ha) site in Leyton, London Borough of Waltham Forest in East London. The market is owned and administered by the City of London Corporation. The market is Europe's leading horticultural market specialising in exotic fruit and vegetables - and the largest revenue earning ...
Smithfield and Billingsgate markets, which have traded in London for hundreds of years, face the axe.
The Fresh Market: Closing at 7 p.m. on Christmas Eve. Closed Christmas Day. Online holiday meal ordering ends Wednesday at 2 p.m. Whole Foods Market: Closing at 7 p.m. on Christmas Eve. Closed ...
The Fresh Market: Closing at 7 p.m. on Christmas Eve. Closed Christmas Day. ... Most stores will be open, some with reduced hours, but pharmacies will be closed. The 24-hour stores and pharmacies ...
Borough Market This is a list of markets in London. Greater London is home to a wealth of covered, outdoor and street markets. Many specialise in a particular type of goods or sell different things on different days. Most open very early in the morning and close early or late afternoon. Markets in London have their origins in the Middle Ages and ancient charter; set up to serve the population ...
The name Spitalfields appears in the form Spittellond in 1399; as The spitel Fyeld on the "Woodcut" map of London of c.1561; and as Spyttlefeildes, also in 1561. [3] The land belonged to St Mary Spital, a priory or hospital (a lodging for travellers run by a religious order) erected on the east side of the Bishopsgate thoroughfare in 1197, from which its name is thought to derive ("spital ...