1
Euston area - 9 April 2014 (3)
Bengali Workers' Association, Surma Community Centre (1). On the Hampstead Road between Robert Street and Prince of Wales Passage.
Photograph is for record only - I have no connection with this organisation.
Image: © The Carlisle Kid
Taken: 9 Apr 2014
0.00 miles
2
Euston area - 9 April 2014 (4)
Bengali Workers' Association, Surma Community Centre (2). On the Hampstead Road at the corner of Robert Street and Prince of Wales Passage.
Photograph is for record only - I have no connection with this organisation.
Image: © The Carlisle Kid
Taken: 9 Apr 2014
0.00 miles
3
The Margarete Centre
Formerly The St Pancras Female Orphanage
Image: © Robin Sones
Taken: 14 Jun 2018
0.01 miles
4
Entrance, Insull Memorial Wing, National Temperance Hospital
Image: © Jim Osley
Taken: 6 May 2013
0.01 miles
5
Hampstead Road
With BT Tower evident in the distance.
Image: © DS Pugh
Taken: 24 Jul 2014
0.02 miles
6
Entrance passageway from Hampstead Road to St. James Gardens, Camden, London
This passageway provides an entrance to St. James Gardens from Hampstead Road.
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Image: © P L Chadwick
Taken: 26 Sep 2014
0.02 miles
7
Former National Temperance Hospital, Hampstead Road
Part of the hospital currently houses the controversial High Speed Railway 2 (HS2) resource centre, and The Collective, a low-cost facility for local start-up companies.
Image: © Jim Osley
Taken: 19 Sep 2016
0.02 miles
8
Plaque commemorating the opening of St. James Gardens, Camden, London
This plaque commemorates the opening of St. James Gardens by Olive Lawson on the 17th August 1887. Previously it was a burial ground. Also on the plaque are the names of various officials of bodies connected with the conversion to a park. Unfortunately the top of the plaque is badly stained and discoloured and very difficult to read, and impossible in this photograph.
The plaque can be found near the start of the entrance passageway to the park from Hampstead Road. See:-
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Image
Image: © P L Chadwick
Taken: 26 Sep 2014
0.02 miles
9
106-108 Hampstead Road
The building bears the legend 'The Saint Pancras Female Orphanage'. The orphanage was founded in 1776, moved to this site in 1790 and the present building dates from 1904, architects E W Hudson and S E Goss. It closed in 1945 and has had various uses since. [source: http://www.childrenshomes.org.uk/StPancrasFemale/ ].
It is not listed (except perhaps locally), but has survived redevelopment in the building of the HS2 terminus behind it, unlike the former Temperance Hospital immediately to the north
Image that has now gone.
Image: © Stephen Craven
Taken: 28 Jun 2022
0.02 miles
10
The Prince is now Shaking
The building centre shot has the Prince of Wales feathers moulded on the parapet, and the old pub name set in stone below the top windows.
Down below there's still a bar, but now trading as Shaker & Company.
Hampstead Road, NW1.
Image: © Des Blenkinsopp
Taken: 2 Feb 2016
0.02 miles