Ealing Gardens
"This was once part of London, but it was badly damaged in the Fall. The brick buildings toppled, the wooden buildings burned. Hillchanger Tower lost its crenellations."[2]
Ealing Gardens is a community just outside London, which serves as the first station of the Great Hellbound Railway.
On the Outskirts[edit | edit source]
"Not everyone who lives here is a Rubbery Man or a market gardener. Other people – the very poor, the very eccentric, and the very unpopular – have found homes here as well."[3]

Ealing was once part of London on the Surface, but it suffered serious damage during the Fall[4] and landed some distance away from the rest of the city.[5] Eventually,[6] some buildings were shoddily repaired and new ones were built in a mix of styles;[7] meanwhile, areas that proved beyond repair were repurposed as mushroom farms.[8] Ealing's citizenry is an eccentric mix of Rubbery Men,[9] London's poor and outcast,[10] and fungus farmers.[11] When the Great Hellbound Railway arrived, it brought with it new visitors and residents of various stripes:[12] retirees from Tracklayer's Union and their families,[13][14] Bohemians seeking inspiration,[15] enterprising paleontologists,[16] and even Monster-Hunters.[17] It also brought the Ministry of Upper River Development, which now oversees the growing community.[18]
Aescwine Hill is a landmark near Ealing and one of the resting points of Hillchanger Tower.[19][20]
The Rubbery Community[edit | edit source]
"Even here, they are subject to stares and unflattering comment. But they are more numerous in these parts than elsewhere."[21]
"People around here often mention Helicon House, a gathering place of Rubberies and Bohemians..."[22]

Rubbery Men make up a significant proportion of Ealing's population. Sadly, even here they face discrimination from the town's human residents,[23] and the Railway's growing influence has negatively impacted the Rubbery locals.[24][25] The Tentacled Entrepreneur recently moved most of his operations to Ealing,[26] and staffed his factories with Rubbery employees.[27]
Helicon House is an important institution in Ealing, especially for the Rubbery community.[28][29] Within its walls, Rubbery people freely express and engage with their artistry and culture,[30][31] allowing ideas to flourish and evolve.[32]
References[edit | edit source]
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