1
Colney Fields Shopping Park, London Colney
Image: © Bryn Holmes
Taken: 25 May 2015
0.11 miles
2
London Colney: Thamesdale and Willowside bus stops
The Thamesdale bus stops are the near ones - the Willowside ones can be seen on either side of the black car in the distance. These are regular stops on Barnet Road which all buses have to observe. The ones on the left side of the road are only about 130 metres apart and it took your decrepit photographer 1 minute and 25 seconds to walk between them. Are these the closest together regular bus stops in the country???!!!
Image: © Nigel Cox
Taken: 31 Jul 2015
0.12 miles
3
A1081 London Colney Bypass exit
Off The Bell Roundabout
Image: © Geographer
Taken: 3 Jul 2012
0.13 miles
4
The Colney Fox pub, London Colney
Image: © Bikeboy
Taken: 19 Jan 2014
0.14 miles
5
Pylon by the M25
Image: © N Chadwick
Taken: 14 Dec 2013
0.16 miles
6
The Bell Roundabout, London Colney
Image: © David Howard
Taken: 28 May 2015
0.16 miles
7
Colney Fox
A public house on Barnet Road in London Colney.
There is a large car park right around the pub accessed up the driveway on the right.
Image: © David P Howard
Taken: 17 Apr 2014
0.16 miles
8
Traffic waits on exit slip road at Junction 22
Image: © Colin Pyle
Taken: 9 May 2011
0.17 miles
9
London Orbital Motorway (M25) at Junction 22 (Bell Roundabout)
The Bell Roundabout is junction 22 of the M25. It used to be a roundabout on the A6 at the southern end of the London Colney bypass, with the old route and the B556. When the final bit of the M25, between the A41 and A1(M) was built, the A6 dual carriageway south of here was upgraded to a motorway and the junction turned into a modified dumbbell (with an extra two roundabouts on the south side of the motorway) keeping the original roundabout (https://www.sabre-roads.org.uk/wiki/index.php?title=The_Bell_Roundabout SABRE).
Image: © David Dixon
Taken: 11 Aug 2023
0.18 miles
10
London Colney: Sainsbury's, Colney Fields Retail Park
This Sainsbury's, just off Junction 22 of the M25 Motorway, is a little out of the ordinary as it used to be one of the company's Savacentre sites, of which there were only 13 in the country. The Savacentre brand was formed in 1975, originally as a joint enterprise between Sainsbury's and Bhs, selling food, clothing and electrical items, but became a wholly owned subsidiary of Sainsbury's in 1989. At the time they were built these 13 sites were some of the largest retail outlets in the country, but nowadays are indistinguishable from any new out-of-town supermarket, and the Savacentre brand name appears to have disappeared.
Image: © Nigel Cox
Taken: 22 May 2009
0.19 miles