1
48-60 Harleyford Road
A plaque between the nearer pair is inscribed, "The Parade 1821", while the far group is named "Olum Terrace 1826" in the parapet. Grade II listed.
Image: © Stephen Richards
Taken: 21 Apr 2013
0.01 miles
2
Vauxhall Grove
Picture taken from Bonnington Square
Image: © PAUL FARMER
Taken: 12 Jul 2009
0.02 miles
3
Georgian terraces on Harleyford Road
Clun Terrace, the nearer row, is dated 1826. The Parade, further along, has an 1821 datestone. This is the way from Vauxhall Station to The Oval Cricket Ground, one of whose floodlights shows above the trees on the extreme left of the picture.
Image: © John Sutton
Taken: 11 Jul 2023
0.02 miles
4
Vauxhall Grove, Vauxhall
Image: © Chris Whippet
Taken: 19 Jul 2015
0.03 miles
5
Bonnington Square Garden, Vauxhall
This small garden has been established on a Second World War bomb site; the story is told here: http://bonningtonsquaregarden.org.uk/index.html .
Image: © Stephen McKay
Taken: 7 Nov 2008
0.04 miles
6
Bonnington Square, Vauxhall
Victorian houses in the north-eastern corner of the square.
Image: © Stephen McKay
Taken: 7 Nov 2008
0.04 miles
7
In the Pleasure Garden at Bonnington Square
Bonnington Square in Vauxhall is an amazing oasis to stumble across near to the high-rise towers of Vauxhall and area. It can be reached via a passageway through a house from Harleyford Road Community Garden and on the other side you reach a square of houses built in the 1870s in order to house railway workers. By the late 1970s, Bonnington Square was compulsorily purchased for the Inner London Education Authority, which intended to demolish it in order to build a new school. A Turkish shopkeeper in one of the buildings managed to prevent the demolition through legal means during the period in which all the houses' occupants were departing, and shortly afterward squatters began moving into the vacated buildings.
It has a secret garden at the centre (known as the Pleasure Garden), leafy overgrown corners, vines climbing up the house fronts and both tropical and native trees planted in every available space. This is the Pleasure Garden. The information board at the entrance can be seen at https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/6998018
More about the place can be seen at https://livinglondonhistory.com/the-fascinating-story-of-vauxhalls-secret-jungle-neighbourhood/ The writer of this post says that he has found one of his new secret spots in London and I agree.
Image: © Marathon
Taken: 19 Oct 2021
0.04 miles
8
In the Pleasure Garden at Bonnington Square
Bonnington Square in Vauxhall is an amazing oasis to stumble across near to the high-rise towers of Vauxhall and area. It can be reached via a passageway through a house from Harleyford Road Community Garden and on the other side you reach a square of houses built in the 1870s in order to house railway workers. By the late 1970s, Bonnington Square was compulsorily purchased for the Inner London Education Authority, which intended to demolish it in order to build a new school. A Turkish shopkeeper in one of the buildings managed to prevent the demolition through legal means during the period in which all the houses' occupants were departing, and shortly afterward squatters began moving into the vacated buildings.
It has a secret garden at the centre (known as the Pleasure Garden), leafy overgrown corners, vines climbing up the house fronts and both tropical and native trees planted in every available space. This is the Pleasure Garden. The information board at the entrance can be seen at https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/6998018
More about the place can be seen at https://livinglondonhistory.com/the-fascinating-story-of-vauxhalls-secret-jungle-neighbourhood/ The writer of this post says that he has found one of his new secret spots in London and I agree.
Image: © Marathon
Taken: 19 Oct 2021
0.04 miles
9
Former industrial wheel in Bonnington Square Pleasure Garden
The wheel in Bonnington Square dates from the 1860s and was rescued from a nearby marble factory as it was being demolished.
Bonnington Square in Vauxhall is an amazing oasis to stumble across near to the high-rise towers of Vauxhall and area. It can be reached via a passageway through a house from Harleyford Road Community Garden and on the other side you reach a square of houses built in the 1870s in order to house railway workers. By the late 1970s, Bonnington Square was compulsorily purchased for the Inner London Education Authority, which intended to demolish it in order to build a new school. A Turkish shopkeeper in one of the buildings managed to prevent the demolition through legal means during the period in which all the houses' occupants were departing, and shortly afterward squatters began moving into the vacated buildings.
It has a secret garden at the centre (known as the Pleasure Garden), leafy overgrown corners, vines climbing up the house fronts and both tropical and native trees planted in every available space. This is the Pleasure Garden. The information board at the entrance can be seen at https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/6998018
More about the place can be seen at https://livinglondonhistory.com/the-fascinating-story-of-vauxhalls-secret-jungle-neighbourhood/ The writer of this post says that he has found one of his new secret spots in London and I agree.
Image: © Marathon
Taken: 28 Jan 2022
0.04 miles
10
The Pleasure Garden at Bonnington Square
Bonnington Square in Vauxhall is an amazing oasis to stumble across near to the high-rise towers of Vauxhall and area. It can be reached via a passageway through a house from Harleyford Road Community Garden and on the other side you reach a square of houses built in the 1870s in order to house railway workers. By the late 1970s, Bonnington Square was compulsorily purchased for the Inner London Education Authority, which intended to demolish it in order to build a new school. A Turkish shopkeeper in one of the buildings managed to prevent the demolition through legal means during the period in which all the houses' occupants were departing, and shortly afterward squatters began moving into the vacated buildings.
It has a secret garden at the centre (known as the Pleasure Garden), leafy overgrown corners, vines climbing up the house fronts and both tropical and native trees planted in every available space. This is the entrance to the Pleasure Garden with the hand almost beckoning you in. The information board at the entrance can be seen at https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/6998018
More about the place can be seen at https://livinglondonhistory.com/the-fascinating-story-of-vauxhalls-secret-jungle-neighbourhood/ The writer of this post says that he has found one of his new secret spots in London and I agree.
Image: © Marathon
Taken: 19 Oct 2021
0.04 miles