1
Aberdeen Park
Looking along a private road in Highbury.
Image: © DS Pugh
Taken: 5 Apr 2016
0.04 miles
2
Aberdeen Park, Highbury N5
As I was taking photographs here - in mid-September - conkers were plonking down from the horse-chestnut trees, a sharp reminder of the changing season.
I've known Aberdeen Park since my student days, and it's always seemed oddly suburban - compared with the urban terraces a few minutes' walk away. I suppose it's because here there are generous front-gardens, and trees which (to a degree) screen the houses from the street.
There's no such suburban concealment in Highbury Place: https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/6964056
Image: © Stefan Czapski
Taken: 16 Sep 2021
0.05 miles
3
Newcombe Estate, Aberdeen Park
Owned by the Islington Housing Association, the estate was opened by actress Joyce Grenfell in 1950.
Image: © Des Blenkinsopp
Taken: 24 Jul 2016
0.05 miles
4
Penfold postbox, Highbury Grove/Aberdeen Park, N5 - royal cipher and crest
Image: © Mike Quinn
Taken: 26 Jun 2008
0.08 miles
5
Highbury Grove/Aberdeen Park, N5
Shows the location of
Image
Image: © Mike Quinn
Taken: 26 Jun 2008
0.08 miles
6
Penfold postbox, Highbury Grove/Aberdeen Park, N5
The location of this postbox is shown in
Image and
Image
Image: © Mike Quinn
Taken: 26 Jun 2008
0.08 miles
7
Penfold (Victorian) pillar-box, Aberdeen Park, Highbury
Close to the corner where Aberdeen Park meets Highbury Grove. I'm ashamed to say I must have driven past this box dozens of times when visiting friends here - without noticing it.
The box seems slimmer than the one in Bedford Park: https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/3531251 and the black-painted base is taller.
Not a satisfactory photo, but one that will remind me to do better next time . . .
Image: © Stefan Czapski
Taken: 16 Sep 2021
0.08 miles
8
Aberdeen Park, N5
Shows the location of
Image
Image: © Mike Quinn
Taken: 26 Jun 2008
0.09 miles
9
"The Woodlands", Aberdeen Park
Brick built local authority apartment block in the Modernist tradition.
Image: © Jim Osley
Taken: 21 May 2017
0.10 miles
10
St Saviour's church Aberdeen Park
Hard to see amid the surrounding greenery but this is an eye-catching church in the quiet surroundings of Aberdeen Park. It was built in 1866 under the influence of the Pre-Raphaelite and Oxford movements, with a full complement of Victorian-gothic features, but became redundant in 1980 after attendance dwindled.
"It is a Grade One listed nineteenth century Neo-Gothic style former Anglican Church. The church was designed by the architect William White (1825-1900). Once described as someone “who see-sawed between madness and genius, and ultimately fell off the wrong side.” St. Saviour’s, his masterpiece, was restored from its derelict state by English Heritage in 1988.
The building is an imposing red brick edifice, with many unique details, from its echoes of Moorish and Dutch architecture, to its Arts and Crafts use of coloured bricks to create the internal decoration of the church. The church also has strong connections with John Betjeman, who worshipped here, and wrote of it in his poems."
From the website of The Florence Trust which now owns it and runs it as studios providing shared space for artists to escape isolation http://www.florencetrust.org/
Betjeman wrote a poem with the title as above which begins:
With oh such peculiar branching and over-reaching of wire
Trolley-bus standards pick their threads from the London sky
Diminishing up the perspective, Highbury-bound retire
Threads and buses and standards with plane trees volleying by
And, more peculiar still, that ever-increasing spire
Bulges over the housetops, polychromatic and high.
Stop the trolley-bus, stop! And here, where the roads unite
Of weariest worn-out London - no cigarettes, no beer,
No repairs undertaken, nothing in stock - alight;
For over the waste of willow-herb, look at her, sailing clear,
A great Victorian church, tall, unbroken and bright
In a sun that's setting in Willesden and saturating us here.
Image: © Natasha Ceridwen de Chroustchoff
Taken: 27 Jul 2009
0.10 miles