1
Western Boulevard at Franklyn Gardens, Nottingham
Image: © Ian S
Taken: 29 Aug 2020
0.06 miles
2
Holbeck Road
Typical detached houses built when the city expanded westwards from the 1930s onwards. The trees mark the edge of some of the many allotments which border Western Boulevard.
Image: © John Sutton
Taken: 12 Jul 2011
0.09 miles
3
Bismillah Boutique, Ainsley Estate
Located on the corner of Northdown Road (left) and Grassington Road in Ainsley Estate, this distinctive building was presumably some sort of grocery shop before it became a boutique. According to Wikipedia, "Bismillah" is an Arabic phrase meaning "in the name of God", and is perhaps best known in the English speaking world for its presence in the song "Bohemian Rhapsody" by Queen.
Image: © Richard Vince
Taken: 1 Feb 2013
0.09 miles
4
Western Boulevard, Beechdale
Private housing on Nottingham's ring road.
Image: © Stephen McKay
Taken: 3 Jul 2008
0.09 miles
5
Grassington Road: former beer-off
This detached house on the corner of Grassington and Northdown Roads was, as the faded painted signs for Whitbread and Guinness show, once a corner off-licence (or beer-off, as Nottinghamians called them). In the High and Far-off Times, under-age drinkers could buy pint bottles of Shipstone's Nutbrown Ale to drink whilst idling away the evening on the street corner opposite.
Image: © John Sutton
Taken: 27 Aug 2010
0.10 miles
6
Western Boulevard, Aspley
Looking north along Western Boulevard (part of Nottingham's ring road) as it approaches Aspley Lane.
Image: © Richard Vince
Taken: 1 Feb 2013
0.11 miles
7
Holbeck Road: a railway long ago
An uninteresting picture of part of an electricity sub-station and some gravel - but to those interested in Nottingham's railway history there is more to it. From the 19th century until the building of Western Boulevard and the houses either side of it in the 1930s, a railway linking Babbington (Cinderhill) Colliery and the Nottingham Canal at a wharf immediately south of Wollaton Road ran north and south here. Its course is marked by the eastern edge of the allotments to the left and the western boundary of the Girls' High School (formerly John Player & Sons) sports ground (beyond the garden hedge on the right).
For other vestiges of the Babbington Colliery line, see
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Image: © John Sutton
Taken: 12 Jul 2011
0.12 miles
8
Northdown Road
Private houses were built at this end of the Ainsley Estate. The first of the council houses on Northdown Road are in the distance, where the road curves to the right. The Woodlands flats dominate the Radford skyline in the way the now demolished John Player & Sons cigarette factory once did. To their left is the spire of All Saints' Church, still further away.
Image: © John Sutton
Taken: 12 Jul 2011
0.12 miles
9
Ainsley Road, Ainsley Estate
Image: © Richard Vince
Taken: 1 Feb 2013
0.14 miles
10
Western Boulevard: Beechdale Road junction
This view north from the railway bridge shows traffic stopping at the Beechdale Road lights. Western Boulevard, part of the ring road, was built in the 1930s at the beginning of the huge westward expansion of the city before and after the war. Until then, Beechdale Road was a footpath from Radford to Bilborough. The Baths are out-of-picture to the left, Robert Shaw Primary School and the Ainsley Estate to the right. Fifty-odd years ago I was nearly knocked off my bike here when turning right to go down the twitchel on to the estate.
Image: © John Sutton
Taken: 12 Jul 2011
0.14 miles