The Jubilee Greenway. Section 7 of 10
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The GLA Roads Designation Order 2000
Status: This is the original version (as it was originally made). This item of legislation is currently only available in its original format. STATUTORY INSTRUMENTS 2000 No. 1117 LONDON GOVERNMENT HIGHWAYS, ENGLAND The GLA Roads Designation Order 2000 Made - - - - 10th April 2000 Laid before Parliament 26th April 2000 Coming into force - - 22nd May 2000 The Secretary of State for the Environment, Transport and the Regions, in exercise of the powers conferred by section 14A of the Highways Act 1980(1) hereby makes the following Order: Citation and commencement 1. This Order may be cited as the GLA Roads Designation Order 2000 and shall come into force on 22nd May 2000. Designation of GLA roads 2.—(1) The highways specified in the Schedule to this Order are hereby designated as GLA roads. (2) In accordance with section 14A(2) of the Highways Act 1980 3rd July 2000 is hereby specified as the date on which those highways are to become GLA roads. Interpretation of the Schedule 3. In the Schedule to this Order— (a) a reference to the boundary of London is a reference to the boundary of Greater London; (b) the description of a highway includes the intersection of that road and any other road that crosses it at the same level; and (c) the description of a highway which, or any length of which, is a trunk road includes any highway constructed as part of the trunk road for the purpose of relieving the main carriageway of the trunk road from local traffic. (1) 1980 c. 66; section 14A was inserted by section 260 of the Greater London Authority Act 1999 (c. -
Rotherhithe Tunnel
Rotherhithe Tunnel - Deformation Monitoring CLIENT: TFL/ TIDEWAY EAST / SIXENSE Senceive and Sixense worked together to design and implement a monitoring programme to safeguard crucial London road tunnel during construction of a nearby tunnel shaft Challenge Solution Outcome The Thames Tideway Tunnel will capture, store and move Monitoring experts at Sixense chose the Senceive FlatMesh™ Senceive provided a fully wireless and flexible monitoring almost all the untreated sewage and rainwater discharges wireless system as their monitoring solution. A total of system which could be installed quickly and easily within that currently overflow into the River Thames in central 74 high precision tilt sensor nodes were installed during the short night-time closures. The installed system was London. The Rotherhithe Tunnel sits in close proximity engineering closures over an eight-week period to monitor sufficiently robust to operate for years without maintenance to the Tideway East shaft site and there was a need to any convergence/divergence during the works. - therefore avoiding the disruption, cost and potential risks ensure that the construction work did not threaten the associated with repeated site visits. Impact on the structure integrity of the tunnel. The CVB consortium (Costain, VINCI Of these, 64 were installed directly onto the tunnel lining in and damage to the tiles was minimal as the nodes required Construction Grands Projets and Bachy Soletanche), along 16 arrays of four nodes. A further 10 nodes were mounted on just a single mounting point and minimal cabling. with Sixense as their appointed monitoring contractor, three-metre beams in a vertical shaft. The FlatMesh™ system required a monitoring system in place 12 months ahead allowed all the nodes to communicate with each other and The Senceive and Sixense teams worked together to modify of shaft construction to provide an adequate period measure sub-mm movements for an estimated project tiltmeter fixings in order to incorporate a 3D prism needed of baseline monitoring. -
HANDBOOK NVL 2014-15 Season 2 Contents
HANDBOOK NVL 2014-15 season 2 Contents Introduction Competitions Commission Volley 123 Funding Team Details Men’s Super 8s Women’s Super 8s Men’s Division 1 Women’s Division 1 Men’s Division 2 North Men’s Division 2 South Women’s Division 2 North Women’s Division 2 South Men’s Division 3 Central Men’s Division 3 North Men’s Division 3 South East Men’s Division 3 South West Women’s Division 3 Central Women’s Division 3 North Women’s Division 3 South Men's Non-NVL Cup Teams Women's Non-NVL Cup Teams Venues Match Venues Fixtures Fixtures and Referee Appointment Information National Competition Dates Rules National Competition Rules Contacts Administrative Officers of the Association 3 NVL 2014-15 season 1 NVL 2014 – 15 season NVL 2014-15 season 4 Introduction Welcome to another National Volleyball League and Cup season and a special welcome to those 19 new teams that are joining the NVL this season. No matter what ever your results are I hope that you all enjoy this season’s volleyball. Last season saw the European Volleyball Federation (CEV) impose on us that all NVL Clubs follow the correct procedures for International Transfer of players. This effectively means that annually any player competing in the NVL whose Federation of Origin is not England would need to follow this procedure and pay the appropriate fee. We were successful in negotiating a phased implementation of this with it only applying to Super 8 teams last season. However this season Division 1 Clubs must also now follow this new procedure. -
Leamouth Leam
ROADS CLOSED SATURDAY 05:00 - 21:00 ROADS CLOSED SUNDAY 05:00TO WER 4 2- 12:30 ROADS CLOSED SUNDAY 05:00 - 14:00 3 3 ROUTE MAP ROADS CLOSED SUNDAY 05:00 - 18:00 A1 LEA A1 LEA THE GHERR KI NATCLIFF RATCLIFF RATCLIFF CANNING MOUTH R SATURDAY 4th AUGUST 05:00 – 21:00 MOUTH R SUNDAY 5th AUGUST 05:00 – 14:00 LIMEHOUSE WEST BECKTON AD AD BANK OF WHITECHAPEL BECKTON DOCK RO SUNDAY 5th AUGUST 14:00 – 18:00 TOWN OREGANO DRIVE OREGANO DRIVE CANNING LLOYDS BUILDING SOUTH ST PAUL S ENGL AND Limehouse DLR SEE MAP CUSTOM HOUSE EAST INDIA O EAST INDIA DOCK RO O ROYAL OPER A AD AD CATHED R AL LEAMOUTH DLR PARK OHO LIMEHOUSE LIMEHOUSBecktonE Park Y Y HOUSE Cannon Street Custom House DLR Prince Regent DLR Cyprus DLR Gallions Reach DLR BROMLEY RIGHT A A ROADS CLOSED SUNDAY 05:00 - 18:00 Royal Victoria DLR W W Mansion House COVENT Temple Blackfriars POPLAR DLR DLR Tower Gateway LE A MOUTH OCEA OCEA Monument COMMERC COMMERC V V GARDEN IAL ROAD East India RO UNDABOU T IAL ROAD ExCEL UNIVERSI T Y ROYAL ALBERT SIL SIL ITETIONAL CHASOPMERSETEL Tower Hill Blackwall DLR OF EAST LONDON SEE MAP BELOW RT R AIT HOUSE MILLENIUM ROUNDABOUT DLR Poplar E TOWN GALLE RY BRIDGE A13 VENU A13 VENUE SAFFRON A SAFFRON A SOUTHWARK THE TO WER Westferry DLR DLR BLACKWALL Embankment ROTHERHITH E THE MUSEUM AD AD CLEOPATRA’S BRIDGE OF LONDON EAST INDIA DOCK RO EAST INDIA DOCK RO LONDON WAPPING T UNNEL OF LONDON West India A13 A13 LEAMOUTH NEED LE SHADWELL LONDON CI T Y BRIDGE DOCK L A NDS Quay BILLINGSGATE AIRPOR T A13 K WEST INDIA DOCK RD K WEST INDIA DOCK RD LEA IN M ARKET IN LEAM RATCLIFF L L SE SE MOUT WAY TATE MODERN HMS BELFAST U U SPEN O O AD A N H H A AY A N W E TOWER E E 1 ASPEN 1 H R W E G IM IM 2 2 L L OREGANO DRIVE 0 W 0 OWER LEA CROSSING L CANNING P LOWER LEA CROSSIN BRIDGE 6 O 6 O EAST INDIA DOCK RO POR AD R THE O2 BL ACK WAL L Y T LIMEHOUSE PR ESTO NS A T A A C C HORSE SOUTHWARK W V RO AD T UNNEL O O E V T T . -
A History of the French in London Liberty, Equality, Opportunity
A history of the French in London liberty, equality, opportunity Edited by Debra Kelly and Martyn Cornick A history of the French in London liberty, equality, opportunity A history of the French in London liberty, equality, opportunity Edited by Debra Kelly and Martyn Cornick LONDON INSTITUTE OF HISTORICAL RESEARCH Published by UNIVERSITY OF LONDON SCHOOL OF ADVANCED STUDY INSTITUTE OF HISTORICAL RESEARCH Senate House, Malet Street, London WC1E 7HU First published in print in 2013. This book is published under a Creative Commons Attribution- NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY- NCND 4.0) license. More information regarding CC licenses is available at https://creativecommons.org/licenses/ Available to download free at http://www.humanities-digital-library.org ISBN 978 1 909646 48 3 (PDF edition) ISBN 978 1 905165 86 5 (hardback edition) Contents List of contributors vii List of figures xv List of tables xxi List of maps xxiii Acknowledgements xxv Introduction The French in London: a study in time and space 1 Martyn Cornick 1. A special case? London’s French Protestants 13 Elizabeth Randall 2. Montagu House, Bloomsbury: a French household in London, 1673–1733 43 Paul Boucher and Tessa Murdoch 3. The novelty of the French émigrés in London in the 1790s 69 Kirsty Carpenter Note on French Catholics in London after 1789 91 4. Courts in exile: Bourbons, Bonapartes and Orléans in London, from George III to Edward VII 99 Philip Mansel 5. The French in London during the 1830s: multidimensional occupancy 129 Máire Cross 6. Introductory exposition: French republicans and communists in exile to 1848 155 Fabrice Bensimon 7. -
{BREWERS} ACC/2305 Page 1 Reference Description Dates BARCLAY P
LONDON METROPOLITAN ARCHIVES Page 1 COURAGE BARCLAY AND SIMONDS LIMITED {BREWERS} ACC/2305 Reference Description Dates BARCLAY PERKINS AND COMPANY LIMITED: CORPORATE Minutes and related papers ACC/2305/01/0001/001 'Partners record book' minutes of partners' Jul 1877 - Jan decisions 1897 ACC/2305/01/0001/002 Note of continued credit agreements with Mar 1878 Apr Messrs. Tyrer and Son, Liverpool 1879 Enclosed in ACC/2305/01/001/1 ACC/2305/01/0002 Board and general meeting minute book Jun 1895 - Oct Indexed 1898 Former Reference: 'No.1' ACC/2305/01/0003 Board and general meeting minute book Oct 1898 - Dec Indexed 1900 Former Reference: 'No.2' ACC/2305/01/0004 Board and general meeting minute book Jan 1901 - Indexed Nov 1902 Former Reference: 'No.3' ACC/2305/01/0005 Board and general meeting minute book Nov 1902 - Indexed Aug 1904 Former Reference: 'No.4' ACC/2305/01/0006 Board and general meeting minute book Sep 1904 - Indexed May 1906 Former Reference: 'No.5' ACC/2305/01/0007 Board and general meeting minute book Jun 1906 - Indexed Nov 1907 Former Reference: 'No.6' ACC/2305/01/0008 Board and general meeting minute book Nov 1907 - Indexed Jun 1909 Former Reference: 'No.7' ACC/2305/01/0009/001 Board and general meeting minute book Jun 1909 - Feb Indexed 1911 Former Reference: 'No.8' ACC/2305/01/0009/002 Note of appointments of director etc. Mar 1910 Enclosed in ACC/2305/01/009/1 LONDON METROPOLITAN ARCHIVES Page 2 COURAGE BARCLAY AND SIMONDS LIMITED {BREWERS} ACC/2305 Reference Description Dates ACC/2305/01/0010 Board, committee and general -
Conran Building 22 Shad Thames London SE1 a Vacant Freehold Residential, Office and Showroom Investment
Conran Building 22 Shad Thames London SE1 A vacant freehold residential, office and showroom investment. Investment Summary – An attractive freehold building with views over the River Thames; – Located in the heart of Southwark, one of the most desirable places in central London to both live and work; – Constructed in 1991 the property comprises 16,405 sq ft (1,524 sq m) of residential, office, showroom and ancillary accommodation arranged over lower ground, ground and 5 upper floors; – To the 4th and 5th floors is an outstanding split level penthouse apartment measuring approximately 4,357 sq ft (404.7 sq m), benefiting from two panoramic terraces with views across the River Thames and London’s iconic skyline; – The property will be sold with full vacant possession provided by no later than Q1 2020; – A unique opportunity for investors or owner occupiers; – Offers are invited in excess of£11.0 million which reflects a low capital value of£671 per sq ft, subject to contract and exclusive of VAT. 2 3 The Shard London Bridge St Paul’s Cathedral One Tower Bridge City Hall Shad Thames Butler’s Wharf Conran Building Tower Bridge A rare opportuntity to acquire City of London a freehold river facing building. Tower of London Providence Square St Katharine Docks 4 5 Conran Building occupies a prominent position on St Saviour’s Dock, a small Conran Building is inlet on the bank of the River Thames. To the west of the property is More located in the heart of London Estate, home to City Hall. The area has attracted major local occupiers including PwC, Ernst & Young, Norton Southwark, one of the Rose Fulbright, HG Capital, Montagu Private Equity, News International and most desirable places Zoopla. -
The Regent's Park
CHALK FARM CAMDEN LOCK CAMDEN ROAD www.postermaps.co.uk | McEwan Paul & Stewart Roger Gibbard, Nick by Cartography 22 minutes walk from CAMDEN LOCK 17 minutes walk from The Regent’s Park MARKET The Regent’s Park GLOUCESTER AVENUE CAMDEN TOWN 9 minutes walk from The Regent’s Park JAMESTOWN ROAD KENTISH TOWN RD ST JOHN’S ELSWORTHY ROAD CAMDEN ROAD SWISS COTTAGE GLOUCESTER OVAL ROAD TE 25 minutes walk from RRA The Regent’s Park C 274. C2 E WOOD CECIL SHARP PRIMROSE HILL ST. MARKS HOUSE ST. JOHNS WOOD CHURCH 12 minutes walk from 24. 27. 31. 168 The Regent’s Park CAMDEN HIGH STREET ALBERT TERRACER E G E N T S P A R K R O A D R E G E N T S P A R K R O A D 274. C2 274 134. 214. 253 PRINCE ALBERT ROAD PARKWAY AVENUE ROAD TRIM TRAIL ALBERT STREETCAMDEN ST. STEPHEN’S CLOSE ST. MARKS TOWNSHEND ROAD BOXWOOD WAY PETANQUE BRIDGE GLOUCESTER ARLINGTON ROAD 274 274 SLIPS DELANCEY STREET P WORONZOW ROAD ZOO ST. EDMUNDS TERRACE PRINCE ALBERT ROAD TITCHFIELD RD CAR PARK MORNINGTON TERRACE ST. JAMES’S TERRACE MEWS PRIMROSE ZOO MAIN GLOUCESTER GREEN PARK VILLAGE EAST HILL BRIDGE REGENTS CANAL ENTRANCE C2 ST. JAMES’S TERRACE274 GLOUCESTER GATE Z S L LONDON ZOO 274 RUNNING TRACK MORNINGTON ST MORNINGTON ALLITSEN ROAD CRESCENT CHARLBERT ROAD ST. JOHNS WOOD TERRACE EAMONT ST MACCLESFIELD ST. KATHARINE’S 15 minutes walk from BRIDGE GATE The Regent’s Park EUSTON MACKENNAL STREET ST. KATHARINE’S 22 minutes walk from 274 CHURCH The Regent’s Park ALBANY STREET READY MONEY DRINKING FOUNTAIN CUMBERLAND TERRACE SPORTS PITCHES C2 OUTER CIRCLE CHARLBERT BRIDGE OUTER CIRCLE ST. -
The Brewing Industry
Strategy for the Historic Industrial Environment The Brewing Industry A report by the Brewery History Society for English Heritage February 2010 Front cover: Detail of stained glass window in the Millennium Brewhouse, Shepherd Neame Brewery, Faversham, Kent. Design, showing elements of the brewing process, by Keith and Judy Hill of Staplehurst. Strategy for the Historic Industrial Environment The Brewing Industry A report by the Brewery History Society for English Heritage February 2010 Text by Lynn Pearson Brewery History Society, 102 Ayelands, New Ash Green, Longfield, Kent DA3 8JW www.breweryhistory.com Foreword The Brewery History Society (BHS) was founded in 1972 to promote research into all aspects of the brewing industry, to encourage the interchange of information about breweries and brewing, and to collect photographic and other archive information about brewery history. The Society publishes a Newsletter and a quarterly journal Brewery History, which first appeared in 1972. It has also published a national directory and a series of county-wide surveys of historic breweries; the Society’s archive is held by Birmingham Central Library. Further details of BHS activities may be found at <http://www.breweryhistory.com>. The ongoing threat to the historic fabric of the English brewing industry was discussed at the conference From Grain to Glass, organised jointly by English Heritage (EH), the BHS and the Association for Industrial Archaeology (AIA), which took place at Swindon on 13 June 2003; the joint BHS and Victorian Society study day From Hop to Hostelry: the brewing and licensed trades 1837 -1914 (Young’s Ram Brewery, Wandsworth, 25 February 2006); and during the AIA Ironbridge Working Weekend (Coalbrookdale, 29 April 2006). -
Jubilee Greenway Section 4 Victoria Park to Stokes Road
V2 : May 2012 V2 May : Jubilee Greenway Directions: Enter Victoria Park from the Regent’s Canal at its north-west Section 4 corner at Canal Gate. Take the first entrance into the park on the left up, some steps. There are other, more accessible routes further along. Turn Victoria Park to Stokes Road right and continue around to the lake where you will see the café. There are also toilets here. Victoria Park extends to some 218 acres and was originally laid out by Sir James Pennethorne between 1842 and 1846; he had been a pupil of the architect, John Nash, and was himself Architect to the Commissioners of Start: Victoria Park - Canal Gate (TQ351835) Woods and Forests. Victoria Park’s design was much inspired by Nash’s Station: Cambridge Heath (rail) or Bethnal Green work at Regent’s Park. (tube) Finish: Stokes Road, North Beckton (TQ420823) Skirt around the lake in Victoria Park and come out of the blue gates (the Crown Gates) at Grove Road, A cross the zebra crossing, and enter the Station: Bus stops on Lonsdale Avenue and Boundary Lane (Newham General Hospital) park again through a second set of blue gates. After 50m, bear right on a pathway that runs more or less parallel with the Hertford Union Canal, called Distance: 5 miles (8 km) the Southern Drive. Introduction: Walk or pedal above the pipes of London’s waste passing Keep along here for over 900m, an athletics track is on the left. Keep ahead the main site of the London 2012 Games. past the athletics club on the Southern Drive for a further 150m until an open crossroads in the park is reached, then turn right to St Mark’s Gate, passing This is the fourth section of the Jubilee Greenway. -
Jubilee Greenway Walk Section 8 PDF 2.00MB
Transport for London. The Jubilee Greenway. Section 8 of 10. Tower Bridge to Westminster Bridge. Section start: Tower Bridge. Nearest stations London Bridge . to start: Section finish: Westminster Bridge. Nearest stations Westminster or Westminster Pier . to finish: Section distance: 2.4 miles (3.9 kilometres). Introduction. The pulse of urban London quickens again as you begin section eight. Hugging the South Bank, it links no less than eight landmark bridges and is a hub of cultural centres, including the Globe Theatre, South Bank Centre, Tate Modern and several famous museums. The route continues to follow the same route as the Thames Path and now also joins the original route of the Jubilee Walkway, as well as The Queen's Walk, which was fully opened in 1994. It is now possible to walk from Tower Bridge to Lambeth, only leaving the riverside briefly at Southwark. After passing through a number of riverside boroughs, the walker is now in a heavily built-up part of London, with many magnificent landmarks in view. The Thames is crossed by numerous bridges. As you walk you will be able to enjoy the skyline of London which has changed dramatically in the last half century, and continues to change from year to year, particularly along this section of the Thames. Look out for the Jubilee Greenway discs in the pavement as you go round. Directions Starting at Tower Bridge (on the south side of the Thames, with Tower Bridge itself on the right), walk along the promenade which is The Queen's Walk towards the peculiar egg-shaped glass building - this is City Hall, home of the Mayor of London and the London Assembly. -
London Green Grid
GREEN INFRASTRUCTURE AND OPEN ENVIRONMENTS: THE ALL LONDON GREEN GRID SUPPLEMENTARY PLANNING GUIDANCE MARCH 2012 LONDON PLAN 2011 IMPLEMENTATION FRAMEWORK SPG THE ALL LONDON GREEN GRID 3 GREEN INFRASTRUCTURE AND OPEN ENVIRONMENTS: THE ALL LONDON GREEN GRID MARCH 2012 SPG THE ALL LONDON GREEN GRID GREATER LONDON AUTHORITY MARCH 2012 Published by Greater London Authority City Hall The Queen’s Walk More London London SE1 2AA www.london.gov.uk enquiries 020 7983 4100 minicom 020 7983 4458 ISBN 978-1-84781-505-7 Copies of this report are available from www.london.gov.uk Crown Copyright All right reserved. GLA 10032216 (2011) The ALGG Project Team – Jane Carlsen, Peter Heath, Pete Massini, Jamie Dean, John O’Neil, Levent Kerimol, Matthew Carrington, Maurizio Biadene and Honoré van Rijswijk. Vector graphics by Design for London utilising baseline data from GIGL. Borough by borough workshops were coordinated by Design for London and consultant design advisors; J+L Gibbons, Adams and Sutherland with Jonathan Cook, Gross Max, East Architecture and Landscape, Lyn Kinnear, Peter Beard / Landroom, 5th Studio, Shape. These were attended by representatives from the London Boroughs and adjacent districts and counties, Transport for London, Environment Agency, Natural England, Groundwork London, London Parks and Greenspaces Forum, Geographic Information Greater London (GIGL), London Wildlife Trust and English Heritage. The Mayor would like to extend thanks to all who contributed to the work of the Area Framework Partnerships and to all those who responded to the consultation. Particular thanks are extended to the Mayor’s Design Advisory Panel and its ALGG Expert Panel: Terry Farrell, Val Kirby, Peter Neal and Ken Worpole.