IMAGES TAKEN NEAR TO
High Street, LONDON, W3 6NG

Introduction

This page details the photographs taken nearby to High Street, W3 6NG 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 (161 Images Found)

Images are licensed for reuse under creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0
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Image
Details
Distance
1
Euphoriom dragon
Fine terracotta decoration on the roof of the former Railway Hotel, built 1899.
Image: © Alan Murray-Rust Taken: 10 Jan 2012
0.01 miles
2
Euphoriom, Acton
The former Railway Hotel has now become a nightclub. The building dates from 1899.
Image: © Alan Murray-Rust Taken: 10 Jan 2012
0.01 miles
3
Mackies Prices
There are in fact at least two generations of advert on this end gable. Prices is clearly a manufacturer's name.
Image: © Alan Murray-Rust Taken: 10 Jan 2012
0.02 miles
4
Houses on High Street, Acton
Image: © JThomas Taken: 13 Apr 2019
0.02 miles
5
Ghosts From the Past
A car turns briskly off High Street, Acton onto Birkbeck Road. The building on the corner has two obvious ghost adverts intermixed. The Mackie's name at the top belongs to an advert for Mackie's White Horse Whisky which adorned the building in 1908. That particular blended Scotch Whisky first went on sale circa 1890. The more obvious advert is for Price's Old English Lavender Soap. This advert almost certainly predates the Mackie's one - Price started manufacturing soap in 1856. There may even be a third advert trying to show through the Price's one. A fascinating glimpse of history!
Image: © Martin Addison Taken: 31 Oct 2013
0.02 miles
6
Ghost Adverts
Located on an end of terrace house beside Birkbeck Street there are two obvious ghost adverts. The Mackie's name at the top belongs to an advert for Mackie's White Horse Whisky which adorned the building in 1908. That particular blended Scotch Whisky first went on sale circa 1890. The more obvious advert is for Price's Old English Lavender Soap. This advert almost certainly predates the Mackie's one - Price started manufacturing soap in 1856. There may even be a third advert trying to show through the Price's one. A fascinating glimpse of history!
Image: © Martin Addison Taken: 31 Oct 2013
0.02 miles
7
Welcome to Acton Town Centre
Looking west on the Vale (A4020).
Image: © JThomas Taken: 13 Apr 2019
0.03 miles
8
Buses in Acton High Street, W3
One of London's infamous 'bendy buses' passes a more traditional double decker in Acton High Street close to the Gala bingo hall.
Image: © Phillip Perry Taken: 8 Nov 2008
0.03 miles
9
Railway track from Acton Central
Image: © John Salmon Taken: 10 Jan 2013
0.03 miles
10
Acton: Gala Bingo Club
Built as the Dominion Cinema in 1937 and closing as the Granada Cinema in 1972 this is now the Gala Bingo Club on Acton's High Street. It is a Grade II Listed Building by virtue of being a good example of a 1930s super-cinema, its facade, and a unique (to cinemas at least) space saving stairway in the foyer. It was designed by Frank Ernest Bromige LRIBA (1902-1979). The English Heritage Listed Building website describes the exterior as follows:- "Tall, symmetrical, Moderne facade. In the centre, three sets of paired entrance doors, flanked by splay walls, the first part rendered. In the centre, the first and second floors break forward as a cantilevered structure to form a large area of glazing, at the same time creating a canopy over the entrance. Twin vertical members rise from this canopy to the third floor level, then curve inwards as fins to support an oversized cornice. The vertical members are filled with continuous glazing, which, at first floor level only, bends around on either side to meet the brick. These glazed areas have broad cornices above which are balconies with Art Deco metal balustrades. All glazing with multiple transoms and margin mullions. French doors give on to these balconies either side. At the top is a deep parapet which formerly carried the name of the cinema. This and the top of the fins are masked by a recent metal fascia. The tall slender windows on the flanking stair towers have also been covered."
Image: © Nigel Cox Taken: 10 Nov 2010
0.04 miles
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