1
Crouch End Telephone Exchange
Situated in Crouch End Hill, this TE has the code LNCED. It provides telephone and broadband services to 21,612 residential and 1,072 non-residential premises in Crouch End, plus Highgate and Hornsey nearby. Until the late 1960s, it used to have FITzroy and MOUntview numbers. FITzroy took its name from Fitzroy Park in Highgate, whilst MOUntview was named after Mount View Road in Crouch Hill. Now it has 0208-340, 341, 347 and 348 numbers. The postcode of this TE is N8 8DH.
Image: © David Hillas
Taken: 3 Apr 2012
0.03 miles
2
Bottom of Crouch End Hill
With Christ Church Crouch End visible in the distance.
Image: © David Martin
Taken: 13 Dec 2016
0.04 miles
3
View over Crouch End from Crouch End Hill
Looking northeast.
Image: © Robert Lamb
Taken: 21 Sep 2019
0.04 miles
4
New Year's Day in Crouch End
Image: © Jim Osley
Taken: 1 Jan 2014
0.04 miles
5
"Harringay Arms" public house, Crouch End
... defying the march of the gastro-pub!
Image: © Jim Osley
Taken: 7 Aug 2010
0.05 miles
6
Crouch End
View down Crouch End Hill, the A103, towards Broadway where it meets Crouch Hill the A1201. The delivery motorbikes all belong to Too Too Moo a Pan Asian Restaurant. All the drivers of the motor bikes seem to be Learner drivers with "L" plates.
Image: © Nigel Mykura
Taken: 23 Aug 2015
0.05 miles
7
Crouch End: Crescent Road, N8
Victorian Gothic houses like these with their steeply pitched roofs and ecclesiastical windows are not uncommon in Crouch End. This one with a totally unsympathetic extension on the side actually belongs to the London Borough of Haringey, rather than being a private residence.
Image: © Nigel Cox
Taken: 26 Sep 2008
0.06 miles
8
Crouch End : Park Chapel
"Park Chapel, at the foot of Crouch Hill, was opened in 1855 and registered by Congregationalists in 1856. Alterations raised its seating to 1,017 in 1877 and 1,430 by 1894. After further extensions it had 816 worshippers in the morning and 671 in the evening on one Sunday in 1903, the largest Congregationalist attendances in Hornsey. The chapel and its halls formed a popular social centre, accommodating Hornsey British school until 1877 and later being described as a 'great church'. From 1973 Baptists from Ferme Park shared Park chapel, by then a United Reformed church and still seating circa 1,400." Source: A History of the County of Middlesex: Volume 6: Friern Barnet, Finchley, Hornsey with Highgate (1980), pp. 183-189. Now partly in use as a recording studio and the Mount Zion Cathedral.
Image: © Jim Osley
Taken: 25 Dec 2020
0.06 miles
9
Park Chapel on Crouch Hill
The Cathedral of Zion currently meets around the rear entrance of the church.
Image: © David Howard
Taken: 17 Oct 2013
0.06 miles
10
Mount Zion Cathedral, Crouch End
Extract from Crouch End Conservation Area report of 2010
Park Chapel, No. 145 Crouch Hill, currently known as the Mount Zion Cathedral,
is a large mid 19th Century local listed two storey stone church building that
extends along the back of the pavement and terminates the views along Haringey
Park. The east elevation has Gothic influences with lancet windows, gables and
tall slate roofs. The central section has a two storey projecting porch with a
parapet and a tall tower with a pointed spire. The south end has a squat tower
with a stone eaves cornice and hipped slate roof. The height, length and bulk of
the Chapel building has a somewhat overbearing effect upon this narrow part of
Crouch Hill and has a significant impact on the appearance of this part of the
conservation area.
Image: © Alan Hughes
Taken: 13 Oct 2018
0.06 miles