EPW053174 ENGLAND (1937). Oakwood and environs, Enfield, from the east, 1937

© Hawlfraint cyfranwyr OpenStreetMap a thrwyddedwyd gan yr OpenStreetMap Foundation. 2025. Trwyddedir y gartograffeg fel CC BY-SA.

Manylion

Pennawd [EPW053174] Oakwood and environs, Enfield, from the east, 1937
Cyfeirnod EPW053174
Dyddiad 21-May-1937
Dolen
Enw lle ENFIELD
Plwyf
Ardal
Gwlad ENGLAND
Dwyreiniad / Gogleddiad 530199, 196083
Hydred / Lledred -0.11791915492758, 51.647980990644
Cyfeirnod Grid Cenedlaethol TQ302961

Pinnau

Bramley Road

Macmartyn
Saturday 18th of November 2023 05:22:46 PM
Cockfosters Road

Macmartyn
Saturday 18th of November 2023 05:16:27 PM
Westpole Avenue

Macmartyn
Saturday 18th of November 2023 05:15:11 PM
Enfield Road

Macmartyn
Saturday 18th of November 2023 05:14:15 PM
Merryhills Drive

Macmartyn
Saturday 18th of November 2023 05:13:06 PM

Macmartyn
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Macmartyn
Saturday 18th of November 2023 05:11:27 PM

Macmartyn
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Greystoke Gardens Open Space

Macmartyn
Saturday 18th of November 2023 05:08:44 PM
Greystoke Gardens

Macmartyn
Saturday 18th of November 2023 05:07:55 PM
De Bohun Primary & Junior School

Macmartyn
Saturday 18th of November 2023 04:44:12 PM
Prince George Avenue

Macmartyn
Saturday 18th of November 2023 04:41:51 PM
Cockfosters Depot

Maurice
Friday 21st of June 2013 10:43:35 AM
Cockfosters Station

Maurice
Friday 21st of June 2013 10:43:05 AM
Oakwood tube station. The station opened on 13 March 1933 as part of the Cockfosters extension, its original name being Enfield West. The station did not appear on the original plans to extend the Piccadilly line beyond Finsbury Park, which only provided for seven additional stations, however it served as the line's terminus for a brief period before Cockfosters station was opened. The station building is a fine example of the architecture Charles Holden built for the Piccadilly Line extensions, with a large and imposing box-shaped ticket hall surrounded by lower structures containing shops. The ceiling of the booking hall is particularly monumental and bold. The whole design mirrors proportions found in classical architecture, albeit in a distinctly 20th century structure. The dimensions of the ticket hall are approximately a "double-cube" (its front elevation is roughly twice its height and width). The station is similar to Holden's slightly earlier designs for Sudbury Town and Acton Town stations at the western end of Piccadilly Line. Oakwood Station is a Grade II* listed building. Like other extensions of the London Underground lines, the opening of the Cockfosters extension stimulated the rapid development of new suburbs and much of the open countryside that existed in 1930 when construction started was quickly covered by new housing developments. Wikipedia

Class31
Friday 21st of June 2013 09:34:25 AM