1
Christian Arabic Evangelical Church
Not a denomination I've come across before.
Image: © David Lally
Taken: 11 Jun 2023
0.01 miles
2
Christian Arabic Evangelical Church
A converted bungalow on Old Shoreham Road that housed the Aldrington Free Church from 1938 to 2003.
Image: © Simon Carey
Taken: 7 Jan 2010
0.02 miles
3
Gladys Road, Hove
A residential road that originally ran from Hallyburton Road to Old Shoreham Road, then the A27. The northern junction with the latter was closed in the 1970s when the road was widened. Part of the Hallyburton estate which was developed in 1925 between the railway and Old Shoreham Road on a former field called Barn Field, according to Aldrington's 1841 tithe map, with the roads named after a local landowner and both his and the builder's daughters.
Image: © Simon Carey
Taken: 3 Dec 2016
0.04 miles
4
Dorothy Road, Hove
A residential road that originally ran from Hallyburton Road to Old Shoreham Road, then the A27. The northern junction with the latter was closed in the 1970s when the road was widened. Part of the Hallyburton estate which was developed in 1925 between the railway and Old Shoreham Road on a former field called Barn Field, according to Aldrington's 1841 tithe map, with the roads named after a local landowner and both his and the builder's daughters.
Image: © Simon Carey
Taken: 3 Dec 2016
0.05 miles
5
Margery Road, Hove
A residential road that originally ran from Hallyburton Road to Old Shoreham Road, then the A27. The northern junction with the latter was closed in the 1970s when the road was widened. Part of the Hallyburton estate which was developed in 1925 between the railway and Old Shoreham Road on a former field called Barn Field, according to Aldrington's 1841 tithe map, with the roads named after a local landowner and both his and the builder's daughters.
Image: © Simon Carey
Taken: 3 Dec 2016
0.08 miles
6
368-374, Old Shoreham Road, Hove
Numbers 368-370 are private houses though the latter looks like it may have been used as a commercial premises before. Number 372 is a Chinese takeaway and 374 a general store which for many years was a local post office. the houses were built in the 1920s.
Image: © Simon Carey
Taken: 22 Dec 2016
0.09 miles
7
A Nation of Shopkeepers !
Shops at the top end of Boundary Road
Image: © Bob Parkes
Taken: 9 Nov 2007
0.09 miles
8
Shops, Boundary Road
Small parade of shops north of the junction with Hallyburton Road. Boundary Road/Carlton Terrace-Station Road has been the major shopping area of Portslade since the 1930s.
Image: © Simon Carey
Taken: 2 Dec 2010
0.09 miles
9
Boundary Road/Carlton Terrace
The houses on the left are on Boundary Road, those on the right are on Carlton Terrace. This is the northern end of the B2194, see
Image for the southern end and an explanation about why the road has two names.
Image: © Simon Carey
Taken: 2 Dec 2010
0.09 miles
10
Knoll Business Centre, Old Shoreham Road, Hove
Built in 1931 as the Knoll School, educating both senior girls and boys, and included an infants block on the northern side. The school was built as a large rectangle with a line of offices dividing the building into two quadrangles, the western side for boys and the eastern one for girls. The growth in population due to the construction of Hangleton estate after the war meant space became a premium with the infants moved to a new site in Stapley Road in 1956, see
Image, and the girls to a new campus in 1967 that later became Hove Park School. A large reorganisation of educational establishments in 1979 resulted in Knoll being merged with the mixed Nevill County Secondary and Hove Grammar School for Boys to become Blatchington Mill School. With the other two schools located on adjacent sites, Knoll became superfluous to needs and was sold off. In 1980 it reopened as a business centre, which it remains to this day.
The Knoll Estate is located in the former northern portion of the parish of Aldrington which was once three open fields called The Knowle East, The Knowle West and The Knowle North according to its 1840 tithe map. The area was developed by Hove council from 1926 and mostly completed by 1939, the remaining undeveloped part at the northern end of Stapley Road was finished in the late 1940s.
Image: © Simon Carey
Taken: 22 Dec 2016
0.10 miles