Area photos


 HOME  ·  ABOUT  ·  ARTICLE  ·  MARKERS OFF  ·  BLOG 
(51.49510 -0.10027, 51.495 -0.1) 


LOCAL PHOTOS
Click here to see map view of nearby Creative Commons images
Click here to see Creative Commons images near to this postcode
Postal area SE1
TUM image id: 1483541461
Licence:
Hopton Street, Borough, 1977.
TUM image id: 1557142131
Licence: CC BY 2.0
The Ring, Blackfriars Road, SE1 (1925) Although established as a boxing venue in 1910, the building dated from 1783 as the Surrey Congregational Chapel by the Reverend Rowland Hill - who reportedly opted for the unusual, circular design so that there would be no corners in which the devil could hide. The person responsible for overseeing the chapel’s conversion was Dick Burge, a former English middleweight champion from Cheltenham. The former place of worship was then a warehouse. Dick and his wife Bella Burge enlisted the help of local homeless people to clean out the building and transform it into a state fit for presenting boxing to the public. The Ring opened on 14 May 1910, with the Blackfriars arena soon staging events four to five times a week, and the name from the circular shape of the building. The term "boxing ring" is not derived from the name of the building, contrary to local legend, but - still from the capital - instead from the London Prize Ring Rules in 1743, which specified a small circle in the centre of the fight area where the boxers met at the start of each round. The term ’ringside seat’ dates from the 1860s.
TUM image id: 1509724629
Licence:
Temple Bar pub, Walworth Road (1919)
TUM image id: 1702057550
Licence: CC BY 2.0
Ayres Street
TUM image id: 1544924072
Licence:
Elephant Road
TUM image id: 1702056801
Licence: CC BY 2.0

In the neighbourhood...

Click an image below for a better view...
Postal area SE1
Licence:


Wagstaff Buildings, Sumner Road, Bankside, c. 1920.
Licence:


Hopton Street, Borough, 1977.
Licence: CC BY 2.0


Demolition of the Heygate Estate and the construction of Elephant Central, May 2014. The Heygate Estate had been completed in 1974. The estate was used extensively as a filming location, due in part to its brutalist architecture.
Credit: Wiki Commons/Zefrog
Licence: CC BY 2.0


Metropolitan Tabernacle (1890) The Metropolitan Tabernacle is a large independent Reformed Baptist church in Elephant and Castle. It was the largest non-conformist church of its day in 1861.
Licence:


Trocadero, Elephant and Castle. Opened in 1930 and demolished in 1963.
Licence:


Amelia Street, SE11 This originally consisted of late 19th century tenement blocks built by James Pullen between 1886 and 1901. During the 1980s the buildings between Manor Place and the south side of Amelia Street were demolished. The demolition of the rest of the Pullens Estate was prevented when squatters, intent on preserving the remainder of an individual late Victorian estate, occupied some of the blocks. The south side of Amelia Street is now an open space - Pullens Gardens - created following the demolition of a tenement block.
Credit: Ideal Homes
Licence:


Shop on the corner of Brook Drive and Hayles Street (2013) This unobtrusive corner shop near Elephant and Castle was the filming location for ’Come On Eileen’ by Dexys Midnight Runners. It’s no longer a shop and - to my horror - my walk from Elephant & Castle to Lambeth North passes it at 7:24 and doesn’t note it as I found out only afterwards. Grrr https://youtu.be/R-e GEXb4M4
Credit: Wiki Commons
Licence:


Elephant Road
Licence: CC BY 2.0


Gladstone Street showing Albert Terrace in the background (1977)
Credit: Ideal Homes
Licence: