1
55 Selby Street, Openshaw
55 Selby Street, a red-brick terraced house in the Openshaw area of Manchester, England. Such houses are typical of Greater Manchester.
Image: © Steven Haslington
Taken: 27 Jun 2011
0.05 miles
2
Last Orders!
The Fox Tavern, Clayton Lane, Openshaw. Closed 2003. Situated in a rather neglected area of east Manchester that is now undergoing regeneration on a big scale.
Image: © Keith Williamson
Taken: 2 Sep 2005
0.07 miles
3
Parkhouse Street
Leading out of West Openshaw into Lower Openshaw and onto Clayton Lane.
Image: © Gerald England
Taken: 28 Sep 2016
0.07 miles
4
Mill Street, Manchester
Social housing on Mill Street at the conjunction of the Beswick/Bradford/Openshaw areas of northeastern Manchester, in Greater Manchester, England.
Image: © Steven Haslington
Taken: 27 Jun 2011
0.10 miles
5
Manchester from the air
Manchester City FC's Etihad Campus training ground is prominent. The main Etihad Stadium on the campus is obscured by the cloud on the left. The National Cycling Centre velodrome can also be seen, at the top of the photo. Seen from a Prague bound flight from Manchester.
Image: © Thomas Nugent
Taken: 6 Jul 2020
0.12 miles
6
Men's Shed Manchester
This is part of the Openshaw & Beswick Community Garden Food & Farm Project, based at St Barnabas Rectory, Lower Openshaw. https://www.manchestercommunitycentral.org/news/men%E2%80%99s-shed-local-community-project-men-all-ages
Image: © Gerald England
Taken: 28 Sep 2016
0.12 miles
7
Ashton Old Road near Clayton Lane South ? 1973
Taken during the period when the Victorian development along the road was being replaced by late 20th century housing development. This view http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/6702667 shows the old character of the area.
SELNEC Central bus 3539, formerly with Manchester Corporation, is returning to City after working a 218X short journey to Fairfield Road. (The full service 218 ran through to Stalybridge.) It is a Leyland PD2 with Metro-Cammell bodywork, new in 1958.
This is one of a series of views featuring buses in the 60s, 70s, and 80s. http://www.geograph.org.uk/search.php?i=137652761
Image: © Alan Murray-Rust
Taken: 8 Apr 1973
0.13 miles
8
St Barnabas from Parkhouse Street
The original church of St Barnabas in Openshaw dated from 1837. The present church was built in 1961 to replace the original structure which had to be demolished. Constructed of brick, the church has a rectangular nave with short transepts beneath a hipped gull-wing roof. It closed in 2014 when the congregation amalgamated with the Church of the Resurrection http://www.resurrectionstbarnabas.org.uk/about-us/history/ elsewhere in the parish. The burial ground was conveyed to Manchester City Council in 1981. The closed churchyard is now maintained by the local authority as a public open space and some 19th and early 20th century headstones remain in situ.
Image: © Gerald England
Taken: 28 Sep 2016
0.13 miles
9
Parkhouse Street
Leading out of Lower Openshaw to West Openshaw.
Image: © Gerald England
Taken: 28 Sep 2016
0.13 miles
10
St Barnabas's burial ground
The burial ground at St Barnabas
Image
Image: © Gerald England
Taken: 28 Sep 2016
0.14 miles