
Traffic in a jam: by 4.30pm yesterday, unrestricted traffic was building up along Sutherland Road, and residents who spoke to Inside Croydon were unhappy with the change
What has been the reaction of residents to the sudden removal, by order of a High Court judge, of motoring restrictions in Croydon’s former Low Traffic Neighbourhoods? We sent GABRIEL MacARTHUR along to two streets affected in Broad Green to find out
Last week, a High Court judge quashed the council orders that created six Low Traffic Neighbourhoods, ordering Croydon to shut down their penalty fine-generating cameras and to remove the signs restricting traffic.
Introduced in 2020, these schemes have been policed by Automatic Number Plate Recognition cameras – ANPRs – since 2024, and were expected to generate more than £10million over four years, according to council reports, through £160-a-time fines for offenders. Continue reading

The country’s largest women’s organisation, famous for its jam-making and cake bakes, the singing of “Jerusalem”, but above all its general good deeds and fellowship, is coming to central Croydon.









CROYDON CHRONICLES: An outstanding producer-director at The Old Vic who performed alongside the likes of Sir Henry Irving and Sir Laurence Olivier, and appeared in some of the most notable films of the 1940s and ’50s, Harcourt Williams’ acting talent was first spotted at Whitgift School.





Polling day in Croydon’s local elections, including its second mayoral vote, is on May 7.


CROYDON IN CRISIS: Council bosses were either over-confident that they would win 
Open Our Roads welcomes today’s landmark High Court judgement in Lawrence v London Borough of Croydon, which has quashed all six Low Traffic Neighbourhood Traffic Orders made permanent in March 2024.
The court concluded that Croydon Council acted for an unlawful purpose, finding that the dominant purpose behind making the schemes permanent was to safeguard revenue raised through enforcement rather than to advance statutory aims such as road safety, access and traffic flow. The Road Traffic Regulation Act 1984 is not a revenue‑raising statute.
On this occasion, closures will affect both ends of the 18.5-mile network. Of the tram network’s 39 stops, 30 of them will be without any service for part of this weekend, March 7-8.