IMAGES TAKEN NEAR TO
Clayton Avenue, MANCHESTER, M20 6BN

Introduction

This page details the photographs taken nearby to Clayton Avenue, M20 6BN by members of the Geograph project.

The Geograph project started in 2005 with the aim of publishing, organising and preserving representative images for every square kilometre of Great Britain, Ireland and the Isle of Man.

There are currently over 7.5m images from over14,400 individuals and you can help contribute to the project by visiting https://www.geograph.org.uk

Image Map


Images are licensed for reuse under creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0
Notes
  • Clicking on the map will re-center to the selected point.
  • The higher the marker number, the further away the image location is from the centre of the postcode.

Image Listing (102 Images Found)

Images are licensed for reuse under creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0
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Image
Details
Distance
1
Sussex Avenue, Didsbury
Houses in a pleasant street which runs down to Fog Lane Park.
Image: © David Hawgood Taken: 22 Oct 2005
0.01 miles
2
A Walk In Didsbury Village (8) Wilmslow Road
A look back up Wilmslow Road where another necessary piece of street furniture appears - a litter bin. Opposite is the Medical Centre which years ago would have been termed a doctor's surgery but nowadays such centres provide a range of services, though today they are under extreme pressure owing to funding which is inadequate to meet all the needs of the UK's population. House for sale notices up the road, but as with the health service, housing is even less adequate for the needs of the UK's population. Didsbury is a very desirable area of Manchester in which to live, so the prices of properties are unaffordable for most.
Image: © Tom Jolliffe Taken: 20 Jul 2023
0.13 miles
3
Houses on Wilmslow Road
Image: © JThomas Taken: 30 May 2024
0.14 miles
4
Cycle path beside Wilmslow Road (B5093)
Image: © JThomas Taken: 30 May 2024
0.14 miles
5
A Walk in Didsbury Village 2
Large Edwardian Villas. Probably little has changed around these large semidetached and detached villas since they were built - except the road surface, kerbs, "furniture" and traffic controls. The garden walls are original sandstone ones and the hedges are trimmed evergreens. More than a casual glance (see Image) reminds us that we are accustomed to a plethora of objects, signs and signals in our roads. Here there are lampposts, smaller posts, bus stop posts and words such as Bus Stop painted on the road surface, bollard posts, bus stop shelters, metal telephone(?) junction cabinets, signs for speed limits, parking regulations, notices about a building's function, cycle lane information signs on posts and painted on the pavement, road names, logos, advertisements, etc. Most of it is necessary, some critically so for safety: it is a veritable mine of information that we should all be able to "read" in our various roles as users of the thoroughfare. Some may see parts of it, though, as a minefield. There are messages everywhere which have to be decoded, but most of us are good at it, by necessity.
Image: © Tom Jolliffe Taken: 20 Jul 2023
0.14 miles
6
A Walk In Didsbury Village 1
Didsbury in Bloom. On entering the village the efforts of local people to enhance the environment with planted containers are evident and striking. What a difference living plants with flowers make to the inanimate hardness of the objects that cluster next to our roads! And Wilmslow Road is a whacking thoroughfare taking thousands of cars and heavier vehicles in and out of Manchester every day. Pedestrians who necessarily have to enter the maelstrom can take moments of enjoyment from the pockets of greenery. Different coloured wheelie bins tell us that rubbish collection is now a sophisticated process and also attests to the threat to the environment that the life of homo sapiens poses. Gone are the days of dumping it all in a convenient gigantic hole and forgetting about it.
Image: © Tom Jolliffe Taken: 20 Jul 2023
0.14 miles
7
A Walk in Didsbury Village 3
Large Edwardian Villas. Probably little has changed around these large semidetached and detached villas since they were built - except the road surface, kerbs, "furniture" and traffic controls. The garden walls are original sandstone ones and the hedges are trimmed evergreens. More than a casual glance (see Image) reminds us that we are accustomed to a plethora of objects, signs and signals in our roads. Here there are lampposts, smaller posts, bus stop posts and words such as Bus Stop painted on the road surface, bollard posts, bus stop shelters, metal telephone(?) junction cabinets, signs for speed limits, parking regulations, notices about a building's function, cycle lane information signs on posts and painted on the pavement, road names, logos, advertisements, etc. Most of it is necessary, some critically so for safety: it is a veritable mine of information that we should all be able to "read" in our various roles as users of the thoroughfare. Some may see parts of it, though, as a minefield. There are messages everywhere which have to be decoded, but most of us are good at it, by necessity.
Image: © Tom Jolliffe Taken: 20 Jul 2023
0.14 miles
8
A Walk in Didsbury Village (104) Sandstone Wall
East Side. The old sandstone block wall is probably little changed since it was built. The heavy dressed cappings are clearly original. The tarmac pattern on the pavement trace a history for those who can read it telling of underground services of all kinds.
Image: © Tom Jolliffe Taken: 20 Jul 2023
0.15 miles
9
A Walk in Didsbury Village (102) Moorland Road Didsbury Day Nursery
East Side. Didsbury Day Nursery
Image: © Tom Jolliffe Taken: 20 Jul 2023
0.15 miles
10
Wilmslow Road junction Fog Lane/Lapwing Lane
Image: © Peter Turner Taken: 21 May 2012
0.15 miles
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