1
West on Earl Rivers Avenue, Warwick Gates estate, Heathcote, south Leamington
Warwick Gates is a large estate established in the late 1990s and now around 20 years old. It was a development stimulated by the full completion of the M40 motorway in 1991. All the roads are named after characters from Shakespeare's plays.
Image: © Robin Stott
Taken: 10 Apr 2017
0.09 miles
2
Harbury Lane by Heathcote Park, Royal Leamington Spa
Heathcote Park, entrance, right, is a mature park homes site
Image, established many years before the Warwick Gates estate, left. Now new estates are springing up along the south side of Harbury Lane. It's a race track: amid this creeping suburbia the speed limit remains 50mph.
Image: © Robin Stott
Taken: 10 Apr 2017
0.10 miles
3
Earl Rivers Avenue, Warwick Gates estate
The traffic calming island doesn't slow anyone down and nature is taking over the stereotyped landscaping.
Image: © Robin Stott
Taken: 11 Aug 2009
0.12 miles
4
Drive to a former sewage treatment site, Heathcote, south Leamington
Nigel Mykura went a bit further
Image and Colin Craig went further still in 2009:
Image and
Image A full-blown sewage works for Leamington Corporation is first shown here on an OS map of 1939; the house not till 1968. The site is on a low summit, allowing effluent to drain into the Tach Brook, thence to the River Avon above the village of Barford. It became redundant in the 1970s after the opening of the sewage works at Longbridge southwest of Warwick, built to serve both towns (and now operated by Severn Trent Water).
It's not clear how the sewage reached the works. From 1871 Leamington Board of Health had by necessity pumped sewage from the works at Edmondscote
Image by a rising main to the Earl of Warwick's land at Heathcote, a rise of 20m over a distance of about 3km, where it was reportedly treated and sold to farmers. Treatment may have consisted of being spread on the land to be naturally irrigated by rain. Old maps show no feature that can be interpreted as a pipeline, yet there were reports of bursts. If it was underground, where did it come to the surface? Did it supply the 1939 works? Alternatively from 1871, could it have been only a short length to an area where solids could be loaded on to carts and conveyed to Heathcote?
Refs: Lyndon F. Cave. Royal Leamington Spa, a history; Phillimore, 2009 ISBN 978-1-86077-505-5
Contemporary newspapers, town council minutes, www.old-maps.co.uk
Image: © Robin Stott
Taken: 3 Jun 2018
0.13 miles
5
Tamora Close, Warwick Gates estate
One of several closes on the southern side of Warwick Gates facing busy Harbury Lane, but screened from it by an existing hedgerow beefed up with trees and shrubs. The footpath runs the whole length, some 1200 metres.
Image: © Robin Stott
Taken: 11 Aug 2009
0.14 miles
6
Get mobile
This mobile home estate has been developed over recent years at Heathcote near Warwick.
Image: © Colin Craig
Taken: 29 Mar 2009
0.15 miles
7
Jourdain Park, Warwick Gates estate, Heathcote, south Leamington
Image: © Robin Stott
Taken: 10 Apr 2017
0.15 miles
8
Cycle path and open space link, Warwick Gates estate
The hedgerow with its oak was one of the few features of the farmland site that was developed as Warwick Gates. With open space alongside it forms the spine of the estate. On the left is the rear of Pericles Close. Out of shot, right, is Jourdain Park. Almost all the streets are named after characters from Shakespeare's plays.
Image: © Robin Stott
Taken: 11 Aug 2009
0.15 miles
9
Entrance to Heathcote Park, Harbury Lane, Warwick
A site for permanent mobile homes:
Image It was transferred here from Myton to allow the construction of Europa Way in the 1980s.
Image: © Robin Stott
Taken: 11 Aug 2009
0.15 miles
10
Welcome to Poets Meadow, Heathcote, south Leamington
Poets Meadow (no apostrophe) is one of several small new residential developments along the south side of Harbury Lane. Four or five different developers are getting a bite of the cherry.
Image: © Robin Stott
Taken: 3 Jun 2018
0.15 miles