1
Rushcliffe Grove
Image: © Jonathan Thacker
Taken: 25 Dec 2020
0.10 miles
2
Entrance to Gypsum Works
Works entrance to British Gypsum in East Leake.
Image: © Jonathan Clitheroe
Taken: 7 Mar 2020
0.12 miles
3
East Leake gypsum works from the air
On final approach to East Midlands Airport.
Image: © Thomas Nugent
Taken: 21 Nov 2011
0.13 miles
4
Welcome to British Gypsum
The East Leake site houses the head offices of British Gypsum, the UK's major producer of plaster products, as well as still being a mining and manufacturing site.
Image: © Alan Murray-Rust
Taken: 30 Mar 2008
0.13 miles
5
Rushcliffe Grove, East Leake
A somewhat unconventional residential cul de sac off Gotham Road at the north end of the village.
Image: © Richard Vince
Taken: 15 Nov 2014
0.14 miles
6
Rushcliffe Grove
The building on the right is, I believe, one of the workers' cottages designed by James Miller http://www.scottisharchitects.org.uk/architect_full.php?id=200001 in 1919. I would welcome confirmation of this.
Image: © Jonathan Thacker
Taken: 25 Dec 2020
0.14 miles
7
Entrance to Rushcliffe Halt
Rushcliffe Halt opened in 1911 principally to serve the adjacent Rushcliffe Golf Course. It closed in 1963 but re-opened in 2001 as part of the Great Central (Nottingham) heritage railway.
Image: © Jonathan Thacker
Taken: 25 Dec 2020
0.15 miles
8
Bus Stop at the British Gypsum works
The bus stop used by employees of the British Gypsum plant near to East Leake.
Image: © Peter Mackenzie
Taken: 29 Aug 2017
0.15 miles
9
Bus stop with shelter at East Leake village name signs
Image: © Roger Templeman
Taken: 28 May 2022
0.15 miles
10
Bus stops at the gypsum works, East Leake
The view here is along the old alignment of Gotham Road, before the construction of the Great Central Railway's London Extension, which it was diverted to cross at right angles (extreme left). This part of the old road was retained to provide access to the gypsum works and a bus turning circle. The junction has been laid out in such a way that buses can enter and leave easily at either end, which I expect would once have been useful for extra buses at shift change times. Nowadays, it is merely an eccentric two way lay by used by Nottingham City Transport buses on route 1 (the former South Notts main line service) towards Nottingham (left) or Loughborough (right).
Image: © Richard Vince
Taken: 15 Nov 2014
0.15 miles