Area photos


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(51.4850395 -0.1279863, 51.485 -0.127) 


LOCAL PHOTOS
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In the neighbourhood...

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Nine Elms station opened during 2021 on the new Battersea extension of the Northern Line
Credit: Transport for London
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Vauxhall Bridge (2010) This bridge - dating from 1906 - is Grade II listed. The first Vauxhall Bridge was opened in 1816.
Credit: Wiki Commons/Paul Farmer
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Victoria coach station’s temporary base (1929) This was sited where the Tachbrook Estate is now. The open-air King’s Scholar Pond sewer is on the left - unthinkable now - and every single building that can be seen in this picture has gone.
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Regency Cafe (2013)
Credit: Geograph/Shazz
Licence: CC BY 2.0


Nine Elms Station map in the 1850s with the new line to Waterloo on right. Before the Waterloo extension, Nine Elms was the main London terminus for the LSWR.
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South Lambeth Place
Credit: The Underground Map
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Tradescant’s Ark The Musaeum Tradescantianum was the first museum open to the public to be established in England. Located in South Lambeth, it comprised a collection of curiosities assembled by John Tradescant the elder and his son in a building called The Ark, and a botanical collection in the grounds of the building. Turret House, the family home, was demolished in 1881. The house stood on the site of the present Tradescant Road and Walberswick Street, off South Lambeth Road.
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Vauxhall Cross (1930s) In this view only the railway bridgework remains the same. Everything else is gone, even the road layout.
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Victoria Mansions with tram, South Lambeth Road on the corner of Old South Lambeth Road Paul O’Grady lived here when Lily Savage was a feature of both the Vauxhall Tavern and Vauxhall’s Elephant and Castle pub. Albert and Atholl Mansions on the left were demolished around 1975 to make way for the Mawbey Estate
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Over 197 festivals take place in London every year including the largest free festival - the Mayor’s Thames Festival - and Europe’s biggest street festival, the Notting Hill Carnival which attracts near one million people
Credit: The Underground Map
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