1
Hockley
This street with its extension up the hill beyond the lights was once the principal exit eastwards from the Old Market Square and housed many big name shows. Now it hosts a number of niche-market shops and several restaurants.
Image: © Alan Murray-Rust
Taken: 27 Jan 2008
0.01 miles
2
Goose Gate, Hockley and a building site
The road beyond the traffic lights is Hockley, which is also the name of this district of inner-city Nottingham. The crane is working on new student flats on Lower Parliament Street, next to the former Sneinton Wholesale Market.
Image: © John Sutton
Taken: 28 Jul 2022
0.02 miles
3
Wall advertising, Hockley
The business to which it refers has long since disappeared. The corner, which used to be occupied by a Woolworths store, is now under redevelopment.
Image: © Alan Murray-Rust
Taken: 25 Dec 2017
0.02 miles
4
Art-deco decoration
On the corner of Hockley and Lower Parliament Street.
Image: © David Lally
Taken: 22 Aug 2020
0.02 miles
5
Old and modern advertising
At the junction of Hockley and Cranbrook Street, Nottingham.
The Berlins club on the corner has been closed for some time.
Image: © David Lally
Taken: 14 Nov 2009
0.02 miles
6
Hockley, Nottingham
View towards Goose Gate from Lower Parliament Street, the A6008.
Image: © David Hallam-Jones
Taken: 10 Jan 2015
0.02 miles
7
Ghost sign, Hockley, Nottingham
It reads:
"BENLE[Y?]
Ladies and Childrens Fashions
Household Linens
Furniture & Carpets"
Image: © Stephen Richards
Taken: 18 Jun 2012
0.02 miles
8
Ghost sign
A single storey building has been demolished and a modern hoarding removed since
Image, revealing more of the old sign.
Image: © David Lally
Taken: 6 Apr 2015
0.02 miles
9
The east end of Hockley
Johnsons Cash Registers occupies what may be an early 19th-century building equipped at some later date with a comical half-timbered false gable. The Bunkers Hill bar was once a branch of Barclays Bank.
Image: © John Sutton
Taken: 3 Jun 2017
0.02 miles
10
Contrast in styles
The brick building is a former industrial premises, now no longer in demand. Even the tower block behind has changed use, having been built for offices before being converted to flats a few years ago. Although not legible in detail, the road name on the building makes reference to the renaming of a number of roads in this area as a result of a road improvement scheme. This one reads Cranbrook Street formerly Coalpit Lane.
Image: © Alan Murray-Rust
Taken: 27 Apr 2008
0.03 miles