Gidea Park

For the 1980s band of the same name, see Adrian Baker.
Gidea Park

Raphael public park in Gidea Park
Gidea Park
 Gidea Park shown within Greater London
OS grid referenceTQ525905
    Charing Cross 15.2 mi (24.5 km)  ENE
London borough Havering
Ceremonial county Greater London
RegionLondon
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post town ROMFORD
Postcode district RM2
Dialling code 01708
Police Metropolitan
Fire London
Ambulance London
EU Parliament London
UK ParliamentRomford
London Assembly Havering and Redbridge
List of places
UK
England
London

Coordinates: 51°35′33″N 0°12′09″E / 51.5926°N 0.2025°E / 51.5926; 0.2025

Gidea Park (/ˈɡɪdə.pɑːrk/) is a small neighbourhood in the London Borough of Havering, United Kingdom. It is a predominantly affluent residential suburb of Romford and was originally known as Romford Garden Suburb.

Locale

Gidea Park is situated south of the Gallows Corner junction where the A12, A127 and A118 roads meet. It is approximately 15 miles (24 km) north-east of Charing Cross.

Romford is a large town to the west of Gidea Park; Ardleigh Green is to the east, and Emerson Park and Hornchurch are to the south.

History

The new Romford Garden Suburb was constructed in 1910–11 on the Gidea Hall and Balgores estates as an exhibition of town planning. Small cottages and houses were designed by more than 100 architects, many of them of considerable reputation. A competition was held to select the best town planning scheme for the suburb; the best designs for houses resulted in those sold at a well-above average £500 and cottages at £375. The project, including a new railway station on the Great Eastern Main Line out of London, was promoted by a company founded by three Liberal Members of Parliament who had links with the Hampstead Garden Suburb development: Herbert Raphael, John Tudor Walters (both later knighted) and Charles McCurdy.[1]

St. Michael and All Angels church in Gidea Park, built in the early 1930s

Known as the exhibition houses, and set in their garden suburb, the houses are fine examples of the domestic architecture of their time. Six of them are now Grade II listed buildings (the initial category of architectural recognition). Further houses, mostly of contemporary flat-roofed design, were built in 1934–35 in Heath Drive, Brook Road, and Eastern Avenue for a Modern Homes Exhibition. One such house (No. 64, Heath Drive) by Berthold Lubetkin's Tecton Group architectural group was the special responsibility of Francis Skinner and is now Grade II listed.[2]

Society and leisure

The Royal Liberty School in Upper Brentwood Road was the first school in Britain (and possibly in Europe) to install an electronic computer (an Elliot 903), in 1965.

Romford Hockey Club is based in Gidea Park. It is also the location of Gidea Park Lawn Tennis Club, Romford Golf Club, and two public parks: Lodge Farm Park and Raphael Park. There are also a number of pubs, restaurants and a library.

Essex County Cricket Club played first-class cricket at the Gidea Park Sports Ground between 1950 and 1968.

Education

Transport links

Gidea Park railway station is on the Great Eastern Main Line, with stopping services running between London Liverpool Street and Shenfield. On Sundays there is also semi-fast services to and from Southend Victoria.[3] From 2018, Gidea Park will be fully served by Crossrail, linking it to additional stations in central London as well as Heathrow Airport and Reading.[4]

Romford railway station is close and is also on the Great Eastern Main Line and sees additional fast and slow services to and from Liverpool Street; it is also the terminus of a branch line to Upminster via Emerson Park.[5]

A number of London Buses routes run through Gidea Park towards Romford, Lakeside Shopping Centre, Dagenham, Harold Hill, Harold Wood, Gallows Corner and Brentwood.[6]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, July 28, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.