1
Path through Holywater Meadows
Image: © Hugh Venables
Taken: 22 Dec 2016
0.07 miles
2
Holywater Meadows
Image: © N Chadwick
Taken: 10 Feb 2018
0.07 miles
3
Poplars by the Linnet
The River Linnet, a tributary of the River Lark, is barely a stream at this point, in Holywater Meadows near the centre of Bury St Edmunds.
Image: © Bob Jones
Taken: 26 Feb 2008
0.08 miles
4
Child Development Centre
Image: © N Chadwick
Taken: 10 Feb 2018
0.09 miles
5
A143 Out Westgate, Bury St.Edmunds
At the junction with Pettycoat Lane
Image: © Geographer
Taken: 3 Oct 2014
0.09 miles
6
Bury St Edmunds houses [327]
This terrace of four houses, even numbers 26 to 32 Hospital Road, was built in the early to mid 19th century in white brick. There is a low flint wall facing the street. Listed, grade II, with details at: https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1022561
Westgate Street is the southernmost street of the medieval grid and it is mainly about the Greene King Brewery with so many of the buildings constructed for its processes or for its employees. In addition to the brewery there is a rich mix of historic buildings in diverse materials, including white brick, red brick and stucco render. The street has the only surviving intact Regency theatre.
Bury St Edmunds is a market town which is the cultural and retail centre for West Suffolk and is known for brewing (Greene King) and sugar (British Sugar). There is scattered evidence of earlier activity but essentially Bury St Edmunds began as one of the royal boroughs of the Saxons and a monastery was founded which became the burial place of King Edmund. A new Benedictine abbey was built in 1020 which became rich and powerful and the town was laid out on a grid pattern by Abbot Baldwin. After the dissolution the abbey became ruinous. A new church, later the cathedral, was begun in the early 16th century.
Image: © Michael Dibb
Taken: 9 Sep 2020
0.09 miles
7
Bury St Edmunds houses [326]
This terrace of four houses, even numbers 18 to 24 Hospital Road, was built in the early to mid 19th century in white brick. There is a low flint wall facing the street. Listed, grade II, with details at: https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1022560
Westgate Street is the southernmost street of the medieval grid and it is mainly about the Greene King Brewery with so many of the buildings constructed for its processes or for its employees. In addition to the brewery there is a rich mix of historic buildings in diverse materials, including white brick, red brick and stucco render. The street has the only surviving intact Regency theatre.
Bury St Edmunds is a market town which is the cultural and retail centre for West Suffolk and is known for brewing (Greene King) and sugar (British Sugar). There is scattered evidence of earlier activity but essentially Bury St Edmunds began as one of the royal boroughs of the Saxons and a monastery was founded which became the burial place of King Edmund. A new Benedictine abbey was built in 1020 which became rich and powerful and the town was laid out on a grid pattern by Abbot Baldwin. After the dissolution the abbey became ruinous. A new church, later the cathedral, was begun in the early 16th century.
Image: © Michael Dibb
Taken: 9 Sep 2020
0.10 miles
8
River Linnet
Image: © N Chadwick
Taken: 10 Feb 2018
0.10 miles
9
Pettycoat Lane, Bury St.Edmunds
At the junction with the A143 Out Westgate
Image: © Geographer
Taken: 3 Oct 2014
0.10 miles
10
Bury St Edmunds buildings [261]
This modern building in Hospital Road is a child development centre, part of the Norfolk and Suffolk NHS.
Westgate Street is the southernmost street of the medieval grid and it is mainly about the Greene King Brewery with so many of the buildings constructed for its processes or for its employees. In addition to the brewery there is a rich mix of historic buildings in diverse materials, including white brick, red brick and stucco render. The street has the only surviving intact Regency theatre.
Bury St Edmunds is a market town which is the cultural and retail centre for West Suffolk and is known for brewing (Greene King) and sugar (British Sugar). There is scattered evidence of earlier activity but essentially Bury St Edmunds began as one of the royal boroughs of the Saxons and a monastery was founded which became the burial place of King Edmund. A new Benedictine abbey was built in 1020 which became rich and powerful and the town was laid out on a grid pattern by Abbot Baldwin. After the dissolution the abbey became ruinous. A new church, later the cathedral, was begun in the early 16th century.
Image: © Michael Dibb
Taken: 9 Sep 2020
0.10 miles