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South Tottenham sits at a busy junction of London’s history and geography, defined largely by its position where the Roman Ermine Street meets the Lee Valley. It feels more residential and slightly quieter than the bustling center of Tottenham to the north, characterized by the long, Victorian terraced streets that fan out towards the River Lea. The area is anchored by Seven Sisters and South Tottenham stations, providing a direct link between the Overground’s Gospel Oak to Barking line and the Victoria line, which makes it one of the better-connected pockets of the borough for getting across the city. To the east, the natural landscape takes over; the Markfield Beam Engine and Museum offers a nod to the area’s industrial engineering past, leading directly into the vast green expanse of the Walthamstow Wetlands and the Lee Valley towpaths. It is a place of transition where the urban density of N15 begins to open up into the marshlands, offering a mix of high-street practicality and immediate access to some of the largest open water spaces in London.