IMAGES TAKEN NEAR TO
Lees Hill Street, NOTTINGHAM, NG2 4JT

Introduction

This page details the photographs taken nearby to Lees Hill Street, NG2 4JT 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 (282 Images Found)

Images are licensed for reuse under creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0
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Image
Details
Distance
1
Sneinton: St Stephen's Avenue
Sneinton mushroomed after the parish became part of the Borough of Nottingham in 1877.
Image: © John Sutton Taken: 16 May 2016
0.02 miles
2
Sneinton: looking down Lees Hill Footway
These steps connect Lees Hill Street (up the hill) and Sneinton Hermitage. The blue-brick retaining wall on the right was part of the large London & North Western Railway goods yard. A bridge carrying four tracks crossed Sneinton Hermitage straight ahead, but there is now no trace of it on the south side of the road, or of the embankment which carried the LNWR goods branch to Trent Lane Junction. The land has been levelled; the yellow-brick houses are on Marham Close, a development built partly where the LNWR lines were and partly (to the right) where the Great Northern coal yard and elevated line to Victoria Station via Weekday Cross once were.
Image: © John Sutton Taken: 8 Sep 2010
0.03 miles
3
Sneinton: Lees Hill Footway
These steps connect Sneinton Hermitage (behind the camera) and Lees Hill Street. The blue-brick retaining wall on the left was part of the large London & North Western Railway Manvers Street goods yard, which was built into the side of the hill and approached by an embankment and a substantial four-track bridge over Sneinton Hermitage. The LNWR gained access to Nottingham through the alliance with the Great Northern which led to the building of the GN&LNW Joint Line through the Vale of Belvoir to Melton Mowbray, Market Harborough and Northampton. The LNWR goods warehouse at Manvers Street was badly damaged by the Luftwaffe in Nottingham's biggest air raids in May 1941. The goods yard site is now occupied by houses of Newark Crescent.
Image: © John Sutton Taken: 8 Sep 2010
0.03 miles
4
Sneinton Hermitage
A view towards the city from the corner of Meadow Lane. Years ago this was a trolleybus route, and the vista was closed by the huge railway bridge which carried the tracks to Manvers Street Goods Depot - its blue-brick abutment shows to the left of the row of houses on the right. The construction of that piece of railway destroyed the sandstone caves of Sneinton Hermitage which gave this road its name.
Image: © John Sutton Taken: 4 Sep 2013
0.03 miles
5
Sneinton: up St Stephen's Road
Sneinton expanded in the last twenty years of the nineteenth century. The gothic-arched paired doorways hereabouts all have male and female label stops: see Image] and Image
Image: © John Sutton Taken: 16 May 2016
0.03 miles
6
Nottingham - NG3 (Old Sneinton)
A small off-shot public garden at the mid-point along Lee's Hill Footway - connecting Sneinton Hermitage (i.e. the road of this name) and Lees Hill Street - shows determination on someone's part to make this shortcut a little more acceptable to the local inhabitants.
Image: © David Hallam-Jones Taken: 12 May 2012
0.04 miles
7
Sneinton Hermitage
Looking towards the junction of Sneinton Boulevard, Colwick Road and Meadow Lane. Image] is a view from the end of Meadow Lane on a brighter morning in September 2013.
Image: © John Sutton Taken: 28 Apr 2014
0.04 miles
8
Sneinton: Lees Hill Street
Typical three-storey terraced houses built in the years after Sneinton became part of the Borough of Nottingham in 1877. Houses like this can be found all over the city in the inner suburbs which mushroomed in the last quarter of the 19th century.
Image: © John Sutton Taken: 15 Apr 2011
0.04 miles
9
Sneinton: female label stop
The paired doorways of the three-storey terraced houses on St Stephen's Road have male and female heads at the bases of the arch mouldings - see Image For the wider context, see Image] and Image
Image: © John Sutton Taken: 16 May 2016
0.04 miles
10
Sneinton: male label stop
The paired doorways of the three-storey terraced houses on St Stephen's Road have male and female heads at the bases of the arch mouldings - see Image For the wider context, see Image] and Image
Image: © John Sutton Taken: 16 May 2016
0.04 miles
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