IMAGES TAKEN NEAR TO
Vale Crescent South, NOTTINGHAM, NG8 3PQ

Introduction

This page details the photographs taken nearby to Vale Crescent South, NG8 3PQ 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 (57 Images Found)

Images are licensed for reuse under creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0
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Image
Details
Distance
1
Ainsley Road
This small council estate to the east of Western Boulevard was laid out in the late 1930s. I wondered if this concrete structure was an air-raid shelter entrance, but my friend Tim Dale, who lived nearby in the fifties and sixties, thinks it is something to do with the drainage system.
Image: © John Sutton Taken: 27 Aug 2010
0.05 miles
2
Ainsley Road: roundabout redevelopment
There have been changes since I was last here in August 2010 (Image]), but quite what they are in aid of is not clear, so I shall have to return.
Image: © John Sutton Taken: 12 Jul 2011
0.06 miles
3
Ainsley Road, Ainsley Estate
Image: © Richard Vince Taken: 1 Feb 2013
0.06 miles
4
Ainsley Road and Vale Crescent
Looking up Ainsley Road on a September morning. For comparison: Image] (2010) and Image] (2011).
Image: © John Sutton Taken: 27 Sep 2023
0.06 miles
5
Southfield Road and the playing field entrance
Council-built houses on Southfield Road. The Ainsley Estate was planned before the Second World War but not completed until after it, as Nottingham continued to expand westwards. Image] shows the rear of these houses.
Image: © John Sutton Taken: 27 Sep 2023
0.08 miles
6
Houses backing on to Robert Shaw Playing Field
Council-built houses on Southfield Road. The Ainsley Estate was planned before the Second World War but not completed until after it, as Nottingham continued to expand westwards. Image] shows the fronts of these houses.
Image: © John Sutton Taken: 27 Sep 2023
0.09 miles
7
East from Western Boulevard Bridge
The green-and-white buildings in the distance are the Opal 1 student accommodation (Image]) built on land east of the former Radford Station once occupied by sidings, Chettle’s and Butterworth and Walker. This picture updates Stephen McKay’s Image], taken from the same place in 2008, before Opal 1 was built. From the 19th century until the building of Western Boulevard and the council houses either side of it, a railway linking Babbington (Cinderhill) Colliery and the Nottingham Canal at a wharf immediately south of Wollaton Road crossed the Radford-Trowell main line at right angles and on the level here – where the tree on the right of the railway in the middle of this shot is; the colliery railway continued due south on a line corresponding to the boundary between the allotments and the back gardens of the houses on Newland Close (the first of which is on the right) and there were sidings and a weighbridge further south where Marchwood Close now stands. Until the abandonment of the colliery railway there was a signal box here, originally west of the colliery railway and later to the east. Babbington Sidings ran parallel to the main line back under the bridge and almost as far west as Woodyard Lane. For other vestiges of the Babbington Colliery line, see Image], Image], Image] and Image
Image: © John Sutton Taken: 12 Jul 2011
0.09 miles
8
Southfield Road: Robert Shaw Playing Field entrance
This council estate was planned in the late 1930s, at the same time as Western Boulevard. My school friend Tim Dale lived in the house in the centre. We listened to a lot of early sixties music in the back bedroom "between the end of the Chatterley ban and the Beatles' first LP".
Image: © John Sutton Taken: 27 Aug 2010
0.09 miles
9
Southfield Road and Robert Shaw Primary School
The Ainsley Estate was planned before the Second World War but not completed until after it, as Nottingham continued to expand westwards. The school opened in 1950.
Image: © John Sutton Taken: 27 Sep 2023
0.10 miles
10
The Robert Shaw Primary School
Robert Shaw opened in 1950 to serve the Ainsley Estate, just in time for the post-war bulge. Its pupils had a short walk along Southfield Road to the playing field, a triangle of well-maintained grass between the two railway lines north of Radford Junction - see Image] and Image
Image: © John Sutton Taken: 12 Jul 2011
0.10 miles
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