The marketplace became so chaotic that many vendors neglected to pay tolls for selling in the piazza, or in some cases refused outright to pay them. The piazza’s owner, the Earl of Bedford, took so many people to court for the non-payment of tolls that he realized there was no way he could charge people to sell goods there if it was in terrible condition. Therefore, in 1830 he had a new market built, accommodating buyer and seller alike, by dividing the market into sections categorized by the kind of goods sold there.
Though the 1830 market did improve things, chaos still prevailed in the daily life of the market. By 1890 people were complaining again as congestion in its narrow streets continued to grow year on year: