By Inna | Speak Up London Student Blog
When I moved to London, I thought the difficult part would be the obvious one: the language. I had come from Ukraine to study English at Speak Up London, so I was preparing myself for classes, new people, a different rhythm of life, all of that.
What I did not expect was how much time I would spend thinking about where to live. Not in a dramatic way, just constantly. On the bus. Before sleep. While checking maps for the tenth time. Because once you actually arrive in London, you realise that the area you choose shapes almost everything.
People love giving advice about London neighbourhoods. Everyone has a favourite. One person says east is the only real choice. Someone else says south has the best atmosphere. Then another person tells you north is more interesting, west is nicer, central is impossible, and suddenly you feel like choosing a place to live has become some kind of personality test.
I listened to all of it, of course. When you are new, you listen to everyone. But after a while I understood that most of that advice was not really helping me. It was helping people describe the version of London they liked. I needed to think about the version of London I was actually going to live.
That was the point. I was not moving for a city break or a few exciting weeks. I was coming to study at Speak Up London, on Oxford Street, and I needed a routine that would not drain me before the day had even started.
I think that is what people forget when they recommend neighbourhoods to newcomers. They talk about:
But when you have just moved countries, you are not only looking for a vibe. You are looking for somewhere that makes daily life less difficult.
At first, I did what everyone does. I looked at the usual popular areas. Each had its own appeal, but I had to look past the surface:
On paper, almost everything looked good. That was the problem.
What helped in the end was asking myself a much less glamorous question: Where would I feel better on an ordinary weekday morning? Not where would I take a nice photo. Not where would I go on a Saturday. Not where would sound impressive if someone asked where I lived. Just: where would my real life be easier?
That question changed everything for me. Because once I thought about my real life, rather than the imagined version of it, I started paying attention to different things:
Suddenly, “exciting” stopped being my main criterion. I did not need London to entertain me every second; London already does enough of that on its own. What I needed was somewhere that would give me a bit of stability while everything else was still unfamiliar.
That is why I ended up choosing Canary Wharf. To be honest, it was not the area I thought I would choose in the beginning. I had the same stereotype a lot of people have: glass buildings, office workers, expensive lunch places, and not much soul. I assumed it might feel too corporate, maybe too cold.
But when I actually looked at it more seriously, I started to see it differently. What I had dismissed as too polished began to feel reassuring.
The biggest factor was the commute: from Canary Wharf, I could reach Tottenham Court Road via the Elizabeth line and walk to Speak Up London. That direct, simple route made my mornings manageable and gave me one part of the day already under control, which was exactly what I needed.
Some people might find Canary Wharf too polished or business-like, and that’s fair. It’s not for everyone:
The point isn’t that Canary Wharf is objectively the best neighbourhood – it was simply the best for me. With easy access to Speak Up London and a calm, manageable daily routine, it made my new life in London feel possible. Not dramatic, not romantic, just practical, and at the beginning, that mattered most.
keila nunes
4 days ago
Nessa escola estou de fato aprendo a falar inglês, já tinha estudando em outro e infelizmente não conseguia destravar a fala.
Alexandre
4 days ago
Speak up London it's a nice place to improve you English. I recommend you
Debora Lemos
5 days ago
I came to the School through Carla, who is an excellent professional. I have known her for 8 months, and I can only thank her for care and attention. I am very happy with the school I have recommended it to my friends. I want to study until my English is good. I am in love with the school and I am grateful to Carla for introducing me this lovely school.