Area photos


 HOME  ·  ARTICLE  ·  MAPS  ·  STREETS  ·  BLOG  ·  CONTACT US 
(51.48928 -0.24566, 51.489 -0.245) 


LOCAL PHOTOS
Click here to see map view of nearby Creative Commons images
Click here to see Creative Commons images near to this postcode
Click here to see Creative Commons images tagged with this road (if applicable)
Ravenscourt Park
Credit: IG/elaiineowe
TUM image id: 1653861576
Licence: CC BY 2.0
Chiswick High Road (1900s)
TUM image id: 1519219785
Licence: CC BY 2.0
St Peter’s Square, W6
TUM image id: 1511370624
Licence: CC BY 2.0

In the neighbourhood...

Click an image below for a better view...
The front building of 22 St Peter’s Square
Credit: Wiki commons
Licence:


St Peters Square, Hammersmith, late 1950s
Credit: unknown photographer
Licence:


Chiswick High Road (1900s)
Licence: CC BY 2.0


Keene’s Automobile Works in Flanders Road, c. 1903. Mr L.P. Keene had earlier set up his works in a yard behind the Stores in Bath Road. He claimed it was the best repairing works in London with accommodation for 250 cars. He developed a fourteen-horsepower steam car called the ’Keenelet’, but it did not catch on and the company failed in 1904. In 1906 the firm of H.J. Mulliner, coachbuilders, took over the premises, which by then included workshops and offices in the three-storey Stores building. Mulliners made high-quality coachwork for firms such as Rolls-Royce and Bentley. It merged with Park Ward and moved to Willesden in 1961. A large red-brick office block, appropriately named Mulliner House, now occupies the site of the automobile works.
Licence:


St Peter’s Square, W6
Licence: CC BY 2.0


Gothick Cottage (early twentieth century) This house - considered one of the most beautiful in the area and a landmark on the Goldhawk Road - was, for many years, the home of a Mr Murcott, a gunsmith. It was demolished in 1958 and eventually replaced by a Shell filling station
Licence:


Fisherman’s Place, Chiswick, photographed probably in the 1920s. This was an enclave of small cottages tucked between a church and the River Thames.
Licence:


The skittle alley at The Black Lion on 8 June 1928
Licence: CC BY 2.0