1
Withington Road Shops, Whalley Range
Image: © David Dixon
Taken: 13 Jul 2010
0.05 miles
2
18 Carlton Road, Manchester
Harewood Lodge, an Italianate villa from a development by the banker Samuel Brooks. He built up the area from the early 1830s and named it Whalley Range.
It was Dom Polski, a care home for elderly Polish people, but this has since closed.
Image: © Stephen Richards
Taken: 17 Aug 2016
0.11 miles
3
Whalley Range Community Centre (Nello James Centre)
The disused and derelict Nello James Centre on Withington Road.
Image: © Peter McDermott
Taken: 17 Apr 2017
0.13 miles
4
St Margaret's Church, Whalley Range
Image: © Ian Greig
Taken: 23 Apr 2015
0.15 miles
5
Whalley Road
View looking down Whalley Road.
Image: © Peter McDermott
Taken: 17 Apr 2017
0.18 miles
6
St Edmund's Church Whalley Range, Manchester
St Edmund's Church Whalley Range was a large stone Victorian church. The congregation now worship in the brick built church hall. The old church has now been converted into flats.
Image: © R Greenhalgh
Taken: 15 Apr 2007
0.23 miles
7
Sunnyside Villa, 52 College Road, Whalley Range, Manchester
This is Sunnyside Villa, Whalley Range, built in 1858 and now one of the last couple of original villas in the area dating from Samuel Brooks layout of Whalley Range. The building with extensive servants quarters hasn’t been lived in for over 40 years and is now under threat from demolition.
**UPDATE MARCH 2009** Sunnyside Villa was demolished in March 2009 to build over 20 terraced houses. Thanks to Jim Thornbury of Range Warehouses
Image: © Ian
Taken: Unknown
0.23 miles
8
Rowan Lodge, Carlton Road, Manchester
An Italianate villa from a development by the banker Samuel Brooks. He built up the area from the early 1830s and named it Whalley Range.
Now Carlton Social Club.
Image: © Stephen Richards
Taken: 17 Aug 2016
0.23 miles
9
Sunnyside Villa, 52 College Road, Whalley Range, Manchester
This is the entrance gates to Sunnyside Villa, Whalley Range, built in 1858 and now one of the last couple of original villas in the area dating from Samuel Brooks layout of Whalley Range. The building with extensive servants quarters hasn’t been lived in for over 40 years and is now under threat from demolition
**UPDATE MARCH 2009** Sunnyside Villa was demolished in March 2009 to build over 20 terraced houses. Thanks to Jim Thornbury of Range Warehouses. This lovely boundary wall, of solide yellow sandstone with the inscription "SUNNYSIDE" carved in it has been terribly mutalated by the contractors
Image: © Ian
Taken: Unknown
0.23 miles
10
St Edmund's
The former St Edmund's Church, a Grade II listed building located opposite Alexandra Park in Whalley Range, was designed and constructed in 1881. It was last used as a congregational church over 20 years ago and narrowly escaped demolition in the 1980's before being converted into apartments. The church congregation now meets in the modern worship-centre next door.
Image: © David Dixon
Taken: 7 Jan 2012
0.24 miles