The area backs onto the
Sheepscar Interchange, a major road interchange between the
A61 towards
Harrogate and the
A58 towards
Wetherby) and the
Leeds Inner Ring Road. To the east of Lovell Park Road is the Oatland estate (i.e. the street names mainly include Oatland). This includes Little London Primary School which was opened in 1974, then closed because of an arson attack in 1995. It re-opened, refurbished in 1999 as Little London Community Primary School. This is named from the 19th century Carlton Barracks which is still in operation. The local pub is The Leeds Rifleman: its name was changed from Windsor Castle in 1984 to honour the 125th anniversary of the founding of the Leeds Rifle Regiment. There were previously two pubs on the Lovel Park Estate; the Londoner and the Hobby Horse and the Oatland estate boasted the Kings Arms and the Lovell Park social club but all these have since closed leaving the Leeds Rifleman on the Carlton Estate as the sole remaining pub. To the south of Claypit Lane is the Lovell Park estate. File:Little London Community Primary School 23 May 2017.jpg|Primary School File:Carlton Carr 23 May 2017.jpg|Part of the Carlton estate File:Subway to Oatland Towers 23 May 2017.jpg|Subway from the Carlton estate to Oatland Towers File:Carlton Gate 23 May 2107.jpg|More modern buildings on Carlton Gate File:Carlton Barracks - geograph.org.uk - 411568.jpg|Carlton Barracks 2007 File:Leeds Rifleman 23 May 2017.jpg|The Leeds Rifleman
Crime In the early 2000s
ASBOs had been issued in the Little London area to counter drug dealing and anti-social behaviour. The leader of the Labour Party Group on Leeds Council thought that these orders had been achieving a reduction in crime in the area. In 2003 66 ASBOs were issued in Little London as a crackdown on anti-social behaviour and drug dealing, the area of Blackman Lane identified as a centre for supply of
controlled drugs and attendant criminality. The tenants and residents association, along with politicians, expressed support for the police action, which was assured would continue. In a letter to the
Yorkshire Evening Post in 2004, he expressed the view that support for ASBOs by the Council needed to be sustained as residents in Little London had noticed a then recent increase in drug dealing, and he hoped that the council would continue to commit funding and commitment to the problem. In November 2011 Little London became a target for street robberies, sometimes accompanied with violence, over
Bonfire Night weekend and later in the month. ==Redevelopment==