IMAGES TAKEN NEAR TO
Colwick Road, NOTTINGHAM, NG2 4BE

Introduction

This page details the photographs taken nearby to Colwick Road, NG2 4BE 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 (68 Images Found)

Images are licensed for reuse under creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0
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Image
Details
Distance
1
In Colwick Hall Woods
This would have been part of the demesne of the Hall and is now part of Colwick Country Park
Image: © Alan Murray-Rust Taken: 6 Jan 2008
0.06 miles
2
Colwick Hall - Nottingham
Image: © Anthony Parkes Taken: 31 Oct 2013
0.06 miles
3
Colwick Hall Hotel
The building is a grade II listed manor. It was built in 1776 although a house was mentioned in the Domesday Book when there was a mill by the Trent. It has been through many owners: the de Colwicks, who held it for a rent of twelve barbed arrows supplied to the king when he came to Nottingham Castle and the Byrons and the Musters. The Bryons held the manor of Colwick for nearly 300 years. The wife of John Musters was Mary Chaworth who was an early love of Lord Byron and featured in his poems. Source: The King's England - Nottinghamshire by Arthur Mee (1946)
Image: © Mick Garratt Taken: 22 Aug 2005
0.06 miles
4
Colwick Hall Lake
This was an ornamental lake associated with the Hall, existing before the current Colwick Country Park, into which it is now incorporated.
Image: © Alan Murray-Rust Taken: 6 Jan 2008
0.07 miles
5
Colwick Hall, Nottingham
John Carr worked here c1776, for John Musters, but the rather pinched proportions betray the fact that the house is earlier - probably late C17th. Carr added the fine attached Ionic portico, hipped roof, parapet, wings and in fact probably all the other stone dressings. Grade II* listed. It is now a hotel - conversion may have been underway when this photo was taken. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- In the C18th architectural hierarchy, Carr (1723-1807) was somewhat more accomplished than most of the breed of skilled, provincial builder-architects of the Georgian era. Whilst not sitting at the top table of the London elite, he was the only provincial member of the London Architects' Club, and "was known and respected in the most sophisticated architectural circles" (Howard Colvin's Biographical Dictionary of British Architects). Based in York (hence his moniker 'Carr of York'), he was "for more than half a century the principal architect practising in Yorkshire and the north of England" (Colvin). His successful and lucrative practice was based very much on country houses for the gentry, the exteriors of which were generally plain but immaculately proportioned and the interiors of which largely followed the fashions set by Robert Adam. He also designed public buildings, churches, and bridges, the latter in his capacity as Surveyor of Bridges for the West Riding (1760-73), and later, as the equivalent (but better-paid) for the North Riding. Carr was also actively engaged in civic life, serving as a city chamberlain, sheriff, alderman, Lord Mayor, and magistrate. All this was achieved in the absence of any professional training - like his father, grandfather and great grandfather before him he trained as a stonemason. On his death, the practice was inherited by his assistant, Peter Atkinson, whose son in turn inherited, and remarkably the practice continues to this day, currently in the guise of Brierley Groom, making it, according to Wikipedia, "the longest running practice in the United Kingdom and probably the world." ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Image: © Stephen Richards Taken: 5 May 2003
0.07 miles
6
Colwick Hall
South Façade and terrace. Basically this is the work of Jhn Carr of York dating from the 1770s. The Hall is now a hotel
Image: © Alan Murray-Rust Taken: 6 Jan 2008
0.07 miles
7
Colwick Hall across the Hall Lake
This attractive late 18th century mansion is now a hotel after being unused for several years.
Image: © Alan Murray-Rust Taken: 6 Jan 2008
0.08 miles
8
Colwick Hall Hotel near the River Trent
Image: © Mat Fascione Taken: 12 Mar 2016
0.08 miles
9
Fountain on the terrace at Colwick Hall
Colwick Hall, after some years empty, is now a Hotel.
Image: © Alan Murray-Rust Taken: 6 Jan 2008
0.09 miles
10
The ruins of the nave of Colwick church
Image: © Jonathan Thacker Taken: 19 May 2006
0.09 miles
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