- The Ace Cafe
The Ace Cafe is an old
transport café inLondon ,England . It originally opened in1938 and was designed to accommodate the traffic travelling on the then new North Circular Road. Because the cafe was open 24 hours a day it soon started to attract motorcyclists. It became popular withRockers in the 1950/60s and it was a local hangout for the petrol heads. Today it has been refurbished and Rockers andmotorcyclist s from all over the world go to the Ace to share stories, fix bikes and see the legend itself.The cafe was rebuilt in
1949 after being destroyed in aWorld War II air raid. This happened because the building is very close to theWillesden Railway Marshalling Yard, the actual target of the raid.A number of events occurred in the
Post-war environment to make the Ace Cafe a success, the emergence of theTeenager ; increases in road traffic; and the British motorcycle industry being at its peak. Many young people started to meet at the cafe with their motorcycles and listen toRock'n'Roll music.The cafe established itself as a cultural hub for
rockers , and many bands and motorcycle enthusiast groups formed there.The original cafe closed in
1969 ; one usage before it re-opened was as a tyre sales and fitting shop, which did, at least for some time, sell and fit motorcycle tyres. The Ace Cafe was refurbished and reopened in2001 , but no longer as a 24-hour restaurant. The cafe is now also famous for its various classic andsports car gatherings. In the past it has been used as the base for the Channel 5 TV programmeFifth Gear in the seasons 10 to 13 (September 2006 until March 2008), and for ITV'sUsed Car Roadshow .The Ace Cafe was a filming location of the 1964 film Leather Boys. It has also recently featured in the
BBC television seriesBy Any Means withCharley Boorman , and the 2008 film Freebird.An attempt was made in the 80s and 90s to re-create the Ace Cafe some miles away on the Western Avenue but this was not in the right place and so was not totally successful.
External links
* [http://www.ace-cafe-london.com Ace Cafe Website]
* [http://caferacersreturn.blogspot.com Return of the Cafe Racers]
* [http://www.classiccafes.co.uk/ace.html Ace Cafe] at Classic Cafes
* [http://www.brent.gov.uk/heritage.nsf/24878f4b00d4f0f68025663c006c7944/4bd0c8591f6abcbe8025722d00608fa1!OpenDocument Wild Ones - The Ace Cafe and Youth Culture: 1955-65] on local authority websiteReferences
*Ramsey, Winston. "The Ace Cafe Then and Now", 2002. ISBN 978-1870067430
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.