Hatton, London

"Hatton Cross" redirects here. For the London Underground station, see Hatton Cross tube station.
Hatton
Hatton
 Hatton shown within Greater London
OS grid referenceTQ095755
London borough Hillingdon
Hounslow
Ceremonial county Greater London
RegionLondon
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post town FELTHAM
Postcode district TW14
Dialling code 020
Police Metropolitan
Fire London
Ambulance London
EU Parliament London
UK ParliamentFeltham and Heston
London Assembly Ealing and Hillingdon
South West
List of places
UK
England
London

Coordinates: 51°28′04″N 0°25′21″W / 51.4678°N 0.4226°W / 51.4678; -0.4226

Hatton is a small settlement in the London boroughs of Hillingdon and Hounslow, on the southern perimeter of London Heathrow Airport and on the A30 road. It was a country village before built-up London spread that far west.

Etymology

Hatton's name comes from Anglo-Saxon Hǣþtūn = "heath farmstead"; until 1819 its cultivated area was surrounded by heath.

Neighbours

It is bordered by Feltham to the south, Bedfont to the west and Heathrow Airport to the north. The A30 road forms the borough boundary with Hillingdon; a border established in 1994, before then land north of the road had been in Hounslow.[1]

Features and facilities

Hatton's main architectural features are a collection of industrial buildings providing ancillary services to Heathrow Airport. The area is noisy due to aircraft overhead on the southern approach to Heathrow. The local meeting place is a quiet little pub, "The Green Man", owned by the Punch Taverns.[2] Adjoining the Green Man is a field where horses, geese, cows and other livestock live: Hounslow Urban Farm[3] (next to Hatton Cemetery), the largest inner city farm in London.

Hatton has a small cafe, but no shops or post office, but there is a convenience store and newsagents within Hatton Cross station. There is a 24-hour Tesco supermarket / petrol station adjoining the urban farm to the south. Hatton no longer has a church, since the chapel building in Steam Farm Lane was converted for office use in 2000. Most of the local housing is mainly semi-detached or maisonettes built between the 1930s and the 1950s. Several older properties remain in Green Man Lane, including the old Manor house (now the headquarters of a car leasing company) and two other 18th century dwellings. The 17th century blacksmith's yard and buildings have been converted into a family home.

East of Hatton is a large lake, formerly a sand and gravel quarry. It is over 500 metres long, but divided by a new road, The Causeway.

Lost features

North of the Great South West Road

When London Heathrow Airport was built, it obliterated all of Hatton that was north of the A30 road (Great South-West Road); that lost part of Hatton straggled northward along Hatton Road, which formerly ran straight right across what is now the airport from Hatton to Harlington Corner (A4 road and A437 road crossing). Notable buildings along Hatton Road included, in order from north to south:

These buildings were demolished in or before 1949. Hatton Road survives as a north end stump (Hatton Road North), visible surface tarmac and wide cropmark on grass east of the end of the north runway, unnamed alignments among service area buildings, the south part of the airport internal road Eastchurch Road, and a south end stump.

South of the Great South West Road

Economy

Heathrow and around, at approximately 1935

Air France-KLM's head office for United Kingdom and Ireland operations, which includes facilities for Air France and KLM, is located in Plesman House in Hatton Cross. The facility's inauguration was on 6 July 2006. Air France moved the office from Hammersmith to Hatton.[7] The Plesman House, outside of Terminal 4 of Heathrow Airport, has the UK commercial team, sales team, and support team.[8]

Transport

The nearest tube station is Hatton Cross tube station. The area is served by a number of London Buses routes, connecting Hatton to the airport, Hounslow, Northolt, Southall, Richmond and Staines.[9]

Free parking is possible in Hatton Lane, but the roads around Hatton are either red routes (stopping not allowed), double yellow lines, or residents' parking (Monday - Friday 8:30 - 5:30). A few credit card paid parking spaces are available near the Green Man public house. The Green Man has its own parking spaces, but long term parking is not encouraged.

Stagecoaches would once have traversed the area en route from London to the south west, a heritage remembered now by this being the location of one of the depots of Ashford Luxury Coaches, whose "Windsorian" branded coaches are used to transport members of the British Royal Family.

References

  1. Office of Public Sector Information - Heathrow Airport (County and London Borough Boundaries) Order 1993
  2. Beer in the Evening - The Green Man
  3. Hounslow London Borough Council - Hounslow Urban Farm
  4. 1 2 page 52, Sherwood, Philip. (2009) Heathrow: 2000 Years of History. Stroud: The History Press ISBN 978-0-7509-5086-2
  5. "Frank Kingdon-Ward timeline of events in his life". French4tots.co.uk. Retrieved 2012-11-07.
  6. Old 1:2500 scale Ordnance Survey maps, reproduced at about 15 inches = 1 mile, publ. Alan Godfrey Maps:-
    • Heathrow, 1934, Middlesex sheet 19.08, ISBN 978-1-84784-112-4
    • Hatton, 1935, Middlesex sheet 20.05, ISBN 978-1-84784-279-4
  7. "AIR FRANCE and KLM celebrate official inauguration of new office in London." Air France. 6 July 2006. Retrieved on 13 February 2010.
  8. "Career Opportunities." Air France UK and Ireland. Retrieved on 13 February 2010.
  9. Transport for London - Buses from Hatton Cross
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