EPW017625 ENGLAND (1927). Wembley Park and Stadium, Wembley, 1927
© Hawlfraint cyfranwyr OpenStreetMap a thrwyddedwyd gan yr OpenStreetMap Foundation. 2024. Trwyddedir y gartograffeg fel CC BY-SA.
Delweddau cyfagos (48)
Manylion
Pennawd | [EPW017625] Wembley Park and Stadium, Wembley, 1927 |
Cyfeirnod | EPW017625 |
Dyddiad | 23-April-1927 |
Dolen | |
Enw lle | WEMBLEY |
Plwyf | |
Ardal | |
Gwlad | ENGLAND |
Dwyreiniad / Gogleddiad | 519155, 185592 |
Hydred / Lledred | -0.28104875117157, 51.556134308848 |
Cyfeirnod Grid Cenedlaethol | TQ192856 |
Pinnau
Canada pavilion, in the process of being dismantled. |
The Laird |
Saturday 18th of February 2023 02:56:30 PM |
Canada pavilion, in the process of being dismantled. |
The Laird |
Saturday 18th of February 2023 02:53:39 PM |
Australia pavilion, with the eastern section in the process of being demolished. |
The Laird |
Saturday 18th of February 2023 02:51:33 PM |
Site of the West Indies and British Guiana Pavilion. Within two years of the BEE closing, much had already been cleared or was in the process of being so. The buildings were never intended to have a life much beyond that of the exhibition. Although well attended, the BEE had not been a financial success and the government was probably keen to see as much as possible sold off and assets freed. |
The Laird |
Friday 21st of October 2022 07:45:25 PM |
Metropolitan Railway depot, Neasden with adjoining power generating station. |
The Laird |
Friday 21st of October 2022 07:34:03 PM |
Former HM Government building of the British Empire Exhibition. |
The Laird |
Friday 21st of October 2022 07:31:44 PM |
This area, already cleared after barely two years, was the site of the Dance Hall on the British Empire Exhibition park. Adjacent to it was its own cafeteria building. This appears still to stand, although now repurposed for light industrial use. |
The Laird |
Friday 21st of October 2022 07:29:41 PM |
In about forty wears or so, these streets of attractive Metro-land housing, built around the site of the old Chalkhill House, would be torn down needlessly to make way for a new social housing estate. The poor planning of the Chalkhill Estate venture ensured that it quickly became a focal point of criminality and antisocial behaviour. |
The Laird |
Friday 21st of October 2022 07:22:13 PM |
It's 1927 and already only the minarets remain of the India Pavilion. |
The Laird |
Friday 21st of October 2022 02:58:46 PM |
These two BEE restaurant buildings I believe still to exist. They are now repurposed for retail, office and industrial purposes. Although modified somewhat, they occupy the exact footprint of the restaurant buildings. |
The Laird |
Friday 21st of October 2022 02:56:29 PM |
This was the site of the Malaya Pavilion during the British Empire Exhibition, but all that remains when this photograph was taken is some of the structural steelwork, including that for the two large minarets. You can see these in this colour postcard image (from the Wembley History Society Collection at Brent Archives, and the statue of Sir Stamford Raffles which stood in front of the main entrance to the pavilion (Singapore was still treated as part of Malaya in the 1920's). |
PhilWHS |
Sunday 8th of June 2014 07:38:39 PM |
This area of the British Empire Exhibition site had been the Amusement Park in 1924 and (with some new attractions) in 1925. By the time of this photograph in 1927, the rides had all been sold off. Some found new homes in resorts such as Blackpool and Southend, but the rest ended up as scrap metal.
Anyone interested in the story of the Exhibition can find an introductory history of it on the Brent Archives website at: http://www.brent.gov.uk/media/387533/The%20British%20Empire%20Exhibition.pdf .
The online catalogue at the Brent Archives website will also give access to a large number of digitised photographs and postcards of the exhibition, many from the Wembley History Society Collection which is deposited there. |
PhilWHS |
Monday 26th of August 2013 02:42:19 PM |
Turning loop for the miniature railway. |
Maurice |
Thursday 17th of January 2013 09:14:33 PM |
I think you may mean turning loop for Road-rail line. It is likely that this closed at the end of 1924 |
Martin |
Thursday 4th of July 2013 07:15:34 PM |
Scenes on the 'Never Stop Railway' can be seen at http://www.britishpathe.com/video/never-stop-railway
The sloping and curved track in the moving pictures is in this area. |
Maurice |
Thursday 17th of January 2013 09:11:45 PM |
'Never Stop Railway' on viaduct. |
Maurice |
Thursday 17th of January 2013 09:07:23 PM |
Southern/Eastern terminus of the 'Never Stop Railway' |
Maurice |
Thursday 17th of January 2013 09:06:29 PM |
Cyfraniadau Grŵp
Wembley Stadium was built in 1922/23 as a multipurpose athletics and entertainment centre for the British Empire Exhibition of 1924/25, seen on the left-hand side (northern)of the photograph. Most of the exhibition buildings were designed by Sir John Simpson and Maxwell Ayrton and constructed in ferro-concrete, at a cost in excess of £10 million. A rare image of one of the main venues for significant events of the "Roaring Twenties". Upwards of 25 million visitors attended the exhibition during the summer of 1924. |
John Swain |
Tuesday 4th of June 2013 06:27:33 AM |
John - Thanks for the comment on EPW005603 and the growth of London. The Wembley pictures, of which this is just one, attract me as my father worked on the site for the surveying firm Baker and Mallet before starting his career in the Southern and British Railways. I have made some annotations on other Wembley pictures relating to the Never Stop Railway which ran around the eastern and north sides of the site and which was of great fascination to my father. As may be seen from many of my 'picture pins' it was railways that brought me to geography and geography that brought me to teaching in London and Devon. Like you, I am now retired. |
Maurice |
Tuesday 4th of June 2013 06:27:33 AM |