1
Shirestone Road turning circle, Tile Cross
This relatively small turning circle was once used by buses from Birmingham city centre via Bordesley Green and Meadway. However, since the construction of the vast Chelmsley Wood housing estate immediately east of here, most buses serving this end of Tile Cross Road (in front of the shops) have extended there. In the early 1980s there were still buses timetabled to turn here, but nothing has been scheduled to for many years, and the bus stop pole that I remember being here about ten years ago has disappeared. Shirestone Road appears to be a dual carriageway; however, the road in the foreground is in fact a service road for some blocks of flats, and runs parallel to Shirestone Road proper (just visible on the left).
Image: © Richard Vince
Taken: 8 Dec 2012
0.06 miles
2
Shirestone Road viewed from Tile Cross Road
Shirestone Road is a street of 1950s Birmingham council housing. On the left can be seen the six blocks of 6-storey flats with their distinctive Y-shaped plan that were built in 1951 and named after country towns. Redditch House is in the foreground.
Image: © A J Paxton
Taken: 18 Apr 2014
0.07 miles
3
Craneberry Road, Tile Cross
The style of housing on Craneberry Road appears to indicate that it is the westernmost extremity of the enormous Chelmsley Wood housing development that is now largely located in Solihull borough. However, this end of Craneberry Road is still just in the City of Birmingham.
Image: © Richard Vince
Taken: 8 Dec 2012
0.07 miles
4
OS benchmark - Tile Cross, at junction of Bosworth Drive & Chapelhouse Road
An OS cutmark dating from 1969 on the east face of a house at the junction. Originally levelled at 92.64m above Ordnance Datum Newlyn.
Image: © Richard Law
Taken: 30 May 2019
0.14 miles
5
Leominster House, Tile Cross
One of a pair - there's a more or less identical block of flats a little further north along Tile Cross Road.
Image: © Richard Law
Taken: 30 May 2019
0.14 miles
6
OS benchmark - Tile Cross, 8 Shelley Close
The rather vandalised remains of a 1969 OS cutmark which was originally levelled at 88.623m above Ordnance Datum Newlyn. Some cableTV/broadband installers are a bit ham-fisted...
Image: © Richard Law
Taken: 30 May 2019
0.16 miles
7
The White Hart Inn
The timber-framed heart of this Grade II listed https://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/101211523-the-white-hart-public-house-shard-end-ward#.WyTUiadKiM8 public house is thought to be early 18th century, but it's been much altered over the years.
Image: © Richard Law
Taken: 26 Apr 2018
0.20 miles
8
East Meadway
Image: © Peter Whatley
Taken: 16 Feb 2013
0.21 miles
9
Tower Blocks, Shirestone Road
These six Y-shaped housing blocks were built in 1951, a time of acute housing shortage, for Birmingham County Borough Council (according to Lynsey Hanley in 'Estates', they were the first high-rise council housing in Birmingham). Each block is of 6 storeys with 30 dwellings, so, 180 homes in total. They were built by Wimpey to their 'no-fines' method (concrete made from clinker with no fine aggregates). They were named after Midlands country towns: Banbury, Ledbury, Leominster, Monmouth (now in Wales), Redditch and Stafford. Ledbury House can be seen in the foreground. See https://www.towerblock.eca.ed.ac.uk/development/tile-cross
Image: © A J Paxton
Taken: 8 May 2014
0.21 miles
10
North on Tile Cross Road
Image: © Richard Law
Taken: 30 May 2019
0.22 miles