1
Brook Road, Dollis Hill
Brook Road rises up from Gladstone Park and Dollis Hill Lane to pass the covered Dollis Hill Reservoir before descending here to eventually meet the North Circular Road. This view is to the open land around the Brent Reservoir with Kingsbury beyond.
Image: © Marathon
Taken: 4 Mar 2015
0.02 miles
2
Brook Road, Dollis Hill
Image: © David Howard
Taken: 26 Jun 2008
0.10 miles
3
Dollis Hill Reservoir
Water supply for London, at the top of Dollis Hill
Image: © David Hawgood
Taken: 5 Oct 2005
0.12 miles
4
Dollis Hill, former Post Office Research Station
This is now Chartwell Court flats. It was built in 1933 as the Post Office Research Station, which included telecommunications research. The history section of the BT website http://www.btplc.com tells us that:
"What is generally regarded as the world's first programmable electronic computer (Colossus) was designed and constructed by a Post Office Research Branch team headed by T H Flowers (1905-1998). It was constructed at Dollis Hill, and transported to Bletchley Park near Milton Keynes, where it was demonstrated on 8 December. Bletchley Park was the centre of British wartime code breaking operations."
Image: © David Hawgood
Taken: 5 Oct 2005
0.13 miles
5
Rosecroft Gardens, Dollis Hill
Image: © David Howard
Taken: 22 Jan 2014
0.18 miles
6
Chartwell Court, 151 Brook Road, Dollis Hill
Now in use as flats, this was formerly the Post Office Research Station where Colossus was built by a team led by Tommy Flowers. Colossus was the world's first digital electronic programmable computer. Colossus and its successors were used by code breakers at Bletchley Park to decrypt German messages during the Second World War. The computer used thermionic valves (vacuum tubes) to perform the calculations. A nearby street is named Flowers Close in honour of the team leader.
Image: © Jaggery
Taken: 12 May 2012
0.18 miles
7
Neville Court on Dollis Hill Lane
By Gladstone Park exit
Image: © David Howard
Taken: 1 Oct 2014
0.20 miles
8
Church of St. Mary and St. Andrew
Located on Dollis Hill Lane. The church was built in 1933 and a side chapel was added by 1978. In August 1982 Fr Maloney procured for the parish the bell, specially cast for the Papal Mass at Coventry, and installed it in the small tower at the front of the church - visible on the left side of the entrance door. A fuller history can be found at http://www.stmaryandstandrew.co.uk/history.html..
Image: © Martin Addison
Taken: 23 Oct 2009
0.20 miles
9
Neville's Court
Located on Dollis Hill Lane, approximately 200yds from the one time Post Office Research Station. In 1939 work started on an alternative cabinet war room within the grounds of the research station called Paddock. There was no accommodation on site, so it was proposed that 60 flats in Neville's court would be used for housing war cabinet senior staff and secretaries. After the start of the London Blitz on 7th September 1940, Churchill visited the site and approved plans to knock two of the flats into one to form a double flat for himself and his secretaries. One week later the Office of Works requisitioned the whole of Neville's Court for the Government.
information from Subterranea Britannica - see http://www.subbrit.org.uk/sb-sites/sites/p/paddock/index.shtml for the full story of Paddock.
Image: © Martin Addison
Taken: 23 Oct 2009
0.20 miles
10
Church and Presbytery
The Church of St Mary and St Andrew with the church house next door.
Image: © Des Blenkinsopp
Taken: 8 Jun 2016
0.20 miles