1
Hollingbury Park Avenue, BN1
Image: © Mike Quinn
Taken: 25 Jun 2014
0.02 miles
2
Ditchling Road from Five Ways Junction
In the centre of a pentagon shaped spiders web of roads. Looking north towards Hollingbury Hill Fort.
Image: © Bob Embleton
Taken: 11 Sep 2005
0.04 miles
3
Stanmer Park Road, BN1
Image: © Mike Quinn
Taken: 25 Jun 2014
0.05 miles
4
Ditchling Road, Fiveways, Brighton
One of the old London-Brighton roads which went via Ditchling Beacon, Lindfield and Godstone and one of the longest named, beginning on The Level, TQ 30 06, then beyond the city boundaries to Ditchling Beacon, TQ 32 16. Fiveways is the name of the junction and is often used locally for the surrounding district located at a point where Preston ends and Hollingdean, which lies in a valley to the east, begins. The junction consists of Ditchling Road that runs from south to north, Preston Drove heading west to Preston village and the A23, Stanford Avenue heading south west also to the A23, and Hollingbury Road that heads east then south to Hollingdean Road. Prior to the 1880s the junction just consisted of a track to Preston.
Image: © Simon Carey
Taken: 4 Oct 2015
0.07 miles
5
St Matthias Church
Located in Hollingbury Park Avenue
Image: © Paul Gillett
Taken: 19 Sep 2010
0.07 miles
6
Beryl BTN Bikes hub at Fiveways
The BTN Bikeshare scheme relaunched with Beryl on 31 March 2023. There are now 780 bikes available to hire from 82 hubs across Brighton & Hove.
This hub is on Ditchling Road next to the Fiveways pub.
Image: © Mat Fascione
Taken: 30 Dec 2023
0.07 miles
7
Hollingbury Road, BN1
Image: © Mike Quinn
Taken: 25 Jun 2014
0.08 miles
8
Sign for The Stanmer Park, Ditchling Road / Hollingbury Road, BN1
Image: © Mike Quinn
Taken: 25 Jun 2014
0.08 miles
9
The Pub at Fiveways
On the corner of Hollingbury Road and Ditchling Road in Brighton.
Image: © Mat Fascione
Taken: 22 Aug 2022
0.08 miles
10
Fiveways, Ditchling Road, Fiveways, Brighton
Up until very recently this was the Stanmer Park Tavern originally opened as a hotel in the 1880s. The name change probably came about due to an unsavoury reputation it picked up around the turn of the century. I certainly never remember it being a problem when I used it in the late 1980s.
Image: © Simon Carey
Taken: 4 Oct 2015
0.08 miles