Dialogue Express Cafe opened on the estate for the first time on Saturday (July 5), staffed by deaf people and run primarily in British Sign Language.
Speaking on a visit the day before, Ms Fiaz said the cafe would “breathe new life into the Carpenters, creating a welcoming and inclusive space for all”.
She said: “This vibrant community hub will not only serve residents of the estate but also invite people from across Newham to connect, collaborate, and enjoy.”
Shahina Begum, an estate resident who visited the cafe ahead of its opening, told the Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS): “It’s very local and it’s good for the deaf people.
“It’s something different. Instead of making something at home, I will come with my friends and family and just say, ‘let’s have a coffee here, sit down and chill out’. It’ll be nice.”
Carpenters Estate resident Shahina Begum (Image: LDRS) But Shahina, who has lived on the estate since 1991, said she was less happy about the wider regeneration.
The council hopes that the regeneration will deliver some 2,300 new homes, half of them for social rent or marketed as ‘affordable’ homes.
Existing tenants will get new homes to rent, and those who have to be displaced during the regeneration will have a right to return.
Carpenters Estate residents order drinks at the Dialogue Express (Image: LDRS) But as a homeowner Shahina says she will not be able to afford to buy a new home once the regeneration is complete.
She said: “I’m used to living here and I don’t want to move out from here. I love this area.”
Shahina added that other developments such as the nearby Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park had made Stratford “busier” than it had been since she arrived in 1991.
She said: “It’s too many people. I’m not used to it with a lot of people – I like quiet.
“I’m not happy with this but sometimes you don’t have a choice.”
The Dialogue Express cafe on the Carpenters Estate in Stratford (Image: LDRS) Ms Fiaz said to not regenerate the Carpenters Estate “would be a denigration of my responsibility to deliver homes”.
She pointed out that 73 per cent of residents had voted to support the regeneration masterplan in a 2021 ballot.
Ms Fiaz told the LDRS: “People on this estate want for it to be vibrant, want for it to be restored.
“We have regular conversations with leaseholders and it is true, some of them aren’t satisfied. It is also true that others are and they realise that evolution and change is a natural part of life.”
She added that once the regeneration was complete it would be a “vibrant, amazing community for people to feel proud of”.
The Carpenters Estate in Stratford (Image: LDRS) Ms Fiaz said: “It will be a lovely, calm, village-like feel amongst the hustle bustle of one of the fastest-growing parts of London.”
Dialogue Express Cafe will open in Gibbins Road, using a former 1970s railway carriage, and will be staffed by deaf baristas.
Driven by Newham Council’s wholly-owned housing company Populo Living, the cafe is intended as a “meanwhile project” aimed at providing facilities for estate residents while the larger regeneration project is ongoing.
The cafe will be open to all, but visitors will be encouraged to order using sign language, with tablets providing video demonstrations on how to do so.
One of the baristas, Karissa, said she hoped working at the cafe would help her become “more confident” and independent.
She told the LDRS: “I’m used to relying on hearing people and hearing family members to help me communicate with others.
“This time I’m a bit more independent. I can communicate in my own way, and it’s empowering for myself.”