1
Melksham Close, Penhill, Swindon
This is the northern edge of the large municipal housing estate developed in the 1950s. It may not have existed had it not been for a land acquisition problem on the east side of Swindon where the next housing estate was planned, Walcot. This resulted in an 18 month hiatus and, rather than break up the housebuilding machine that had formed to build houses for the Council, the decision was made to extend Penhill further north than had originally been planned. This took up the slack until work started on Walcot in 1955. Rightly or wrongly 'the valley' as it became known gained a reputation as a sink for 'problem families'. An attempt to remove the stigma was made by the Council by trying to rename the area as 'Lower Penhill'. I don't think it caught on.
Image: © Brian Robert Marshall
Taken: 3 Oct 2008
0.08 miles
2
Houses in Melksham Close, 'the valley', Penhill, Swindon
Melksham Close is at the northern edge of Penhill. The estate was developed in the early to mid 1950s by the local council. I understand it had been intended to complete the estate a few hundred metres south of here but circumstances made the council decide to carry on down the northern slope of the hill the estate is mainly built upon. This northern extension became known as 'the valley' and soon acquired something of a poor reputation where it was suspected 'problem families' were housed. I have no way of knowing whether that is true or, if it is, was a deliberate policy on the part of the Housing department. It is true that there have been instances of some properties in the valley having been used as crack houses.
Image: © Brian Robert Marshall
Taken: 3 Oct 2008
0.08 miles
3
Path behind the Houses
One of a number of local paths and cycleways through grassy or wooded strips of land which have been left in between the housing.
Image: © Des Blenkinsopp
Taken: 19 Jan 2020
0.09 miles
4
Elstree Way, Abbey Meads, Swindon
Abbey Meads is part of the very large Northern Development Area of Swindon. The area is bisected by a spine road called Thamesdown Drive which runs roughly north-east to south-west north of the established parts of Swindon. Development is taking place north and south of Thamesdown Drive. Elstree Way is south of it. The road leading off to the left is Wynwards Road.
Image: © Brian Robert Marshall
Taken: 13 May 2008
0.13 miles
5
Ramsbury Avenue, Penhill, Swindon
The avenue is the spine road of 'the valley' area of Penhill, that part of the estate developed last. The entrance to Imber Walk is visible at the left behind the silver car. The pillar box is unlikely to be a Victorian post box or a Georgian post box or an Edwardian post box.
Image: © Brian Robert Marshall
Taken: 3 Oct 2008
0.15 miles
6
Minety Road towards Ramsbury Avenue, Penhill, Swindon
This a view further down the hill into the valley on the northern edge of Penhill. In the far distance on the skyline is the much more recent northern development area.
Image: © Brian Robert Marshall
Taken: 3 Oct 2008
0.17 miles
7
Abbey Meads primary school
Catering for the recent influx of young families, to northern Swindon.
Image: © Roger Cornfoot
Taken: 15 Jan 2007
0.18 miles
8
Cagney Drive, Haydon Wick
Image: © Des Blenkinsopp
Taken: 19 Jan 2020
0.19 miles
9
Minety Road, Penhill, Swindon
Penhill is a local authority housing estate developed in the early to mid 1950s. Swindon Borough Council took advantage of the Town Development Act 1952 to expand at a rapid rate in the post-war years. Most of Penhill sits on relatively high ground in the northern part of the town but falls away north into a valley through which a small watercourse runs. Minety Road takes the visitor into the valley.
Image: © Brian Robert Marshall
Taken: 3 Oct 2008
0.23 miles
10
Penhill Copse
A strip of woodland extending off the Seven Fields Nature Reserve. Possibly preserved as an environmental amenity, but more likely because it's on a slope too steep to build on.
Whatever the reason, it's a nice bit of green amongst all the houses.
Image: © Des Blenkinsopp
Taken: 19 Jan 2020
0.24 miles