1
Adeyfield: St Barnabas Church
Photographed on Easter Sunday with the congregation in good voice, the foundation stone of the church was laid by Queen Elizabeth II on 20 July 1952. The Church's website is here http://www.stb-hemel.info/index.htm
Image: © Nigel Cox
Taken: 12 Apr 2009
0.04 miles
2
St Barnabas Church, Adeyfield: Interior view
The inside of St Barnabas church, seen from the gallery at the west end.
Image: © John Webb
Taken: 9 Feb 2015
0.05 miles
3
Petrol station on Adeyfield Road, Hemel Hempstead
In 2014 it was BP with a Costcutter shop
Image: © David Howard
Taken: 23 Nov 2019
0.06 miles
4
Adeyfield Road, Hemel Hempstead
Image: © David Howard
Taken: 23 Nov 2019
0.08 miles
5
Adeyfield: The New Venture
Public house in The Queen's Square contemporary with the rest of the buildings in the neighbourhood.
Image: © Nigel Cox
Taken: 12 Apr 2009
0.09 miles
6
Adeyfield: The Queen's Square
Adeyfield was once nothing more than a farm and a hamlet, quite separate from Hemel Hempstead, but post-war residential development has meant that it is now just a neighbourhood area within the town. The Queen's Square was so named after a visit by Queen Elizabeth II in July 1952 to lay the foundation stone for the nearby
Image
Image: © Nigel Cox
Taken: 12 Apr 2009
0.09 miles
7
Adeyfield Road, Hemel Hempstead
Image: © David Howard
Taken: 23 Nov 2019
0.10 miles
8
Adeyfield Community Centre
Adeyfield was the first of Hemel Hempstead New Town's eight neighbourhoods to be developed. This is the Community Centre in The Queen's Square.
Image: © Nigel Cox
Taken: 12 Apr 2009
0.10 miles
9
Longlands, Hemel Hempstead
Image: © David Howard
Taken: 4 Sep 2022
0.16 miles
10
Adeyfield: Tenzing Road
Adeyfield was the first of Hemel Hempstead New Town's neighbourhoods to be developed, with construction starting around 1952. This road and its estate neighbours, Everest Way and Hillary Road, would have been named after the successful Everest summit-topping expedition team of May 1953. The denizens of Tenzing Road can sleep in their beds safe in the knowledge that Streetmap tells us that this is the only Tenzing Road in the country. Dacorum Borough Council have replaced most of the original road name plates in their area recently, so the one at the foot of the lamppost on the left here, with its faded gold letters on a blue background, is very much a survivor of an earlier time.
Tenzing Norgay, or Sherpa Tenzing, died at the age of about 71 in 1986.
Image: © Nigel Cox
Taken: 12 Apr 2009
0.19 miles