Tottenham has much to recommend it but also some stubborn problems, including a lingering reputation, vastly unfair on most of its people, for violent disorder and crime. What is the best way for its Labour-run local authority to change what is bad without losing what is good? How can it effect change when its powers and budgets are increasingly limited by central government? How do local people feel about its strategy? I spent some time in the area last week with student film maker Max Curwen-Bingley, gathering a range of insights and views. We hope you find them enlightening. The film is 11-and-a-half-minutes long.

Transforming Tottenham film by Max Curwen-Bingley.

Many thanks to all those who found time to talk to us. For more on Haringey Council’s regeneration plans for Tottenham see here and for a full (and generally sceptical) assessment of its approach to redevelopment by the Observer’s architecture critic Rowan Moore from May 2015, see here. The results of the council’s consultation with residents of the Love Lane estate and other people in the High Road West regeneration area are here and the website of the estate’s residents’ association is here. Activist groups and others unhappy with the council’s regeneration policies set out their alternative position here. You can learn more about the Ada National College for Digital Skills here and more about Tottenham Hotspur’s new stadium here. Your constructive comments are, as ever, welcome.