Maintained by | Broxtowe Borough Council |
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Coordinates | 52°55′52.4″N1°13′14.4″W / 52.931222°N 1.220667°W Coordinates: 52°55′52.4″N1°13′14.4″W / 52.931222°N 1.220667°W |
North | Derby Road, Beeston |
South | High Road, Beeston |
Wollaton Road, Beeston runs north from its junction with High Road, Beeston to Derby Road.
In 1853 a baptist chapel on the road was purchased by the Primitive Methodists and in 1882 they rebuilt the chapel in its current form.
The street is dominated by the four-storey Anglo Scotian Mills building built in 1892 in the crenellated gothic style by the architect James Huckerby for F Wilkinson as a lace and shawl factory. It is Grade II listed [1]
In 1932 the development along the road was such that it became necessary to renumber the houses. [2] As an example, the terrace of 12 houses between Middleton Street and Clinton Street numbered 63 to 85 became 101 to 123.
In 1937 the council investigated proposals to extend Wollaton Road from its junction with Derby Road along the footpath to Wollaton village, but this project was not proceeded with. [3]
In 1939 Beeston and Stapleford Urban District Council provided two public air raid shelters on Wollaton Road with accommodation for 50 people. These were situated opposite Bramcote Drive and opposite Denison Street. [4]
Beeston is a town in Nottinghamshire, England, 3.4 miles (5.5 km) south-west of Nottingham city centre. To the immediate north-east is the University of Nottingham's main campus, University Park. The pharmaceutical and retail chemist group Boots has its headquarters 0.6 miles (1 km) east of the centre of Beeston, on the border with Broxtowe and the City of Nottingham. To the south lies the River Trent and the village of Attenborough, with its extensive wetlands.
Sileby railway station is a railway station serving the village of Sileby in Leicestershire, England. The station is located on the Midland Main Line, 106 miles 50 chains (171.6 km) north of London St Pancras.
Beeston railway station is a Grade II listed railway station on the Midland Main Line which serves the town of Beeston in Nottinghamshire, England. It lies 3.2 miles (5.1 km) south-west of Nottingham railway station, and 750 metres (0.5 mi) south-east of Beeston transport interchange for local buses and Nottingham Express Transit trams. The station is managed by East Midlands Railway.
Richard Charles Sutton was an architect based in Nottingham. He was born 1834 and died on 18 October 1915.
The Anglo Scotian Mills is former lace factory in Beeston, Nottinghamshire. It is a Grade II listed building.
John Wills was an architect based in Derby.
Queen's Road Methodist Church was a Methodist church in Beeston, Nottinghamshire
William Herbert Higginbottom JP was an architect based in Nottingham.
Abraham Harrison Goodall LRIBA was a British architect based in Nottingham.
Alfred John Thraves FRIBA was an architect based in Nottingham who specialised in cinema design.
William James Morley FRIBA was an English architect who practised from offices in Bolton, Greater Manchester and Bradford, West Yorkshire.
Ernest Reginald Ridgway was an English architect based in Long Eaton.
Arnold Plackett LRIBA was an 20th century architect based in Long Eaton.
Station Road, Beeston is street in Beeston, Nottinghamshire. It runs from its junction with High Road, Beeston in Beeston Square to Beeston railway station.
Beeston Fields Drive is street in Beeston, Nottinghamshire. It runs from its junction with Wollaton Road, Beeston to Cow Lane, Bramcote.
James Huckerby was a 19th-century builder and architect based in Beeston, Nottingham.
Henry Hardwick Dawson FRIBA was an architect based in Nottingham.
Captain Albert Edgar Eberlin FRIBA MC was an architect based in Nottingham.
Wollaton Road Methodist Church, Beeston was a Methodist church on Wollaton Road, Beeston, Nottinghamshire from 1853 until 2014.
Lieut-Colonel Herbert Walker FRIBA, M Inst CE, FSI, was an architect, surveyor and civil engineer based in Nottingham from 1870 to 1923.