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This page simply reformats the Flickr public Atom feed for purposes of finding inspiration through random exploration. These images are not being copied or stored in any way by this website, nor are any links to them or any metadata about them. All images are © their owners unless otherwise specified.

This site is a busybee project and is supported by the generosity of viewers like you.

City Centre 4, Edgbaston 2, Bearwood 3½ - Selly Oak Triangle fingerpost by ell brown

City Centre 4, Edgbaston 2, Bearwood 3½ - Selly Oak Triangle fingerpost

City Centre 4, Edgbaston 2, Bearwood 3½ - Selly Oak Triangle fingerpost.

Taken this many times before.

The trees behind it. A break in the rain, waiting for the 11A bus on Oak Tree Lane.

Capgemini, 233, Bristol Rd, Greenford, Ealing, 1997, 97-4k-61 by peter marshall

© peter marshall, all rights reserved.

Capgemini, 233, Bristol Rd, Greenford, Ealing, 1997, 97-4k-61

Capgemini, 233, Bristol Rd, Greenford, Ealing, 1997, 97-4k-61

Whitehouse Wharf, Selly Oak by ell brown

Whitehouse Wharf, Selly Oak

Whitehouse Wharf, Selly Oak.

And the Unite student accommodation.


Was hoping to get the new wetland lake at the Birmingham Life Sciences Park to the right of here, a view I spotted from the train going down to Longbridge.

Took this heading to Five Ways, but bright sunshine over the canal junction of the Lapal Canal.

West Midlands Railway Class 730 over the Selly Oak Railway Bridge by ell brown

West Midlands Railway Class 730 over the Selly Oak Railway Bridge

Passing Selly Oak Station from Heeley Road towards the Bristol Road.


West Midlands Railway Class 730 over the Selly Oak Railway Bridge.

Seen from Heeley Road near The Bristol Pear pub.

Selly Oak Station - West Midlands Railway sign by ell brown

Selly Oak Station - West Midlands Railway sign

Passing Selly Oak Station from Heeley Road towards the Bristol Road.


The West Midlands Railway sign on Heeley Road.

Street art at The Bristol Pear in Selly Oak by ell brown

Street art at The Bristol Pear in Selly Oak

Street art at The Bristol Pear in Selly Oak.

I last saw it from a previous visit to Selly Oak Station months earlier, so was walking down Heeley Road this time towards the Bristol Road.


No fog in Selly Oak, just a blue sky with clouds and shadows.

Plus scaffolding was over the street art for some reason or another.

Street art at The Bristol Pear in Selly Oak by ell brown

Street art at The Bristol Pear in Selly Oak

Street art at The Bristol Pear in Selly Oak.

I last saw it from a previous visit to Selly Oak Station months earlier, so was walking down Heeley Road this time towards the Bristol Road.


No fog in Selly Oak, just a blue sky with clouds and shadows.

Plus scaffolding was over the street art for some reason or another.

Hilda narrowboat at Whitehouse Wharf, Worcester & Birmingham Canal, Selly Oak by ell brown

Hilda narrowboat at Whitehouse Wharf, Worcester & Birmingham Canal, Selly Oak

Frozen at Whitehouse Wharf, Worcester & Birmingham Canal, Selly Oak.

Got to the Bristol Road after a walk from Bournville to Selly Oak.

Boats here wont be going anywhere while the water was frozen.


Hilda narrowboat - City skyline with University of Birmingham to the distant City Centre.

Frozen at Whitehouse Wharf, Worcester & Birmingham Canal, Selly Oak by ell brown

Frozen at Whitehouse Wharf, Worcester & Birmingham Canal, Selly Oak

Frozen at Whitehouse Wharf, Worcester & Birmingham Canal, Selly Oak.

Got to the Bristol Road after a walk from Bournville to Selly Oak.

Boats here wont be going anywhere while the water was frozen.

Frozen canoes at Whitehouse Wharf, Worcester & Birmingham Canal, Selly Oak by ell brown

Frozen canoes at Whitehouse Wharf, Worcester & Birmingham Canal, Selly Oak

Frozen at Whitehouse Wharf, Worcester & Birmingham Canal, Selly Oak.

Got to the Bristol Road after a walk from Bournville to Selly Oak.

Boats here wont be going anywhere while the water was frozen.


Double canoes from the South Birmingham Paddle Club.

Green lights on the Old Joe clock faces at the University of Birmingham by ell brown

Green lights on the Old Joe clock faces at the University of Birmingham

The University of Birmingham afternoon walk from the North Gate to South Gate.

Green lights on the Old Joe clock faces at the University of Birmingham.


Seen from the no 63 bus stop on Bristol Road in Edgbaston through netting at one of the sports pitches.

Mining Department Heraldic Shield at the University of Birmingham by ell brown

Mining Department Heraldic Shield at the University of Birmingham

The University of Birmingham afternoon walk from the North Gate to South Gate.

This was between the Guild of Students and Sports & Fitness building on the way to the South Gate.


Mining Department Heraldic Shield. Unknown maker. 1920s. Stone. Research and Cultural Collections.

Mining Department Heraldic Shield at the University of Birmingham by ell brown

Mining Department Heraldic Shield at the University of Birmingham

The University of Birmingham afternoon walk from the North Gate to South Gate.

This was between the Guild of Students and Sports & Fitness building on the way to the South Gate.


Mining Department Heraldic Shield. Unknown maker. 1920s. Stone. Research and Cultural Collections.

University of Birmingham South Gate Lodge by ell brown

University of Birmingham South Gate Lodge

An afternoon walk through the University of Birmingham's Edgbaston Campus from the North Gate to the South Gate.

As I got to the South Gate it started to rain, so crossed over the Bristol Road to catch a 63 bus to Selly Oak Triangle.


You can now see the University of Birmingham Sport & Fitness
building behind.

Gatehouse / University Lodge.

Grade II Listed Building

University of Birmingham Lodge, Gates, Gate Piers and Wall


Listing Text


997/0/10535 BRISTOL ROAD
19-OCT-10 (North side)

University of Birmingham Lodge, Gates,
Gate Piers and Wall

II

A lodge, gate, gate piers and walling to Birmingham University campus, built to the designs of Aston Webb and Ingress Bell, between 1904 and 1909.

MATERIALS: Both lodge and walling are of red Accrington brick, laid in English Garden Wall bond with ashlar dressings of Darley Dale stone. The pyramidal roof is of graduated, green, Westmoreland slates. The gates are of cast and wrought iron and lanterns at either side of the gateways are of bronze with copper domed roofs.

PLAN: The walling borders the roadside and the gates are recessed, with quadrants of walling to either side connecting with the roadside. The lodge is square on plan and of two storeys, with a rectangular, walled yard to its east side.

EXTERIOR: There are three gateways, the central one for road traffic and the lateral pair for pedestrians with ashlar piers between them. The central gateway has a single gate which is hinged at west and to either side of it are short iron screens. The coat of arms of the university in high relief is set in an arched panel on each side of the gate. The pedestrian gates are plainer and all gates have dog bars to their lower bodies. The stone piers are rectangular in plan and have a dentilled band below the cornice. The pedestrian gates have moulded surrounds with prominent keystones and there are octagonal electric lanterns to the tops of their piers. Walling at either side of the gates is ramped, but the pattern for the rest of the walling is uniform, with stone piers dividing the wall into bays. To the east of the gate recess are four bays and at west are twelve bays, although the wall formerly stretched further to the west and has now been demolished beyond the twelfth bay. A balustrade to the top of the wall has rectangular balusters and a simple, cambered coping. The lodge is set back to the north-east of the gateway, but is connected to the walling by a pair of wooden gates on its south side.
The walling of the lodge on all sides is of garden wall bond with three rows of stretchers to one row of headers, and set into this are flush bands of ashlar. All four corners have clasping buttresses and the centre bay on the north, south and west faces each projects. The west (entrance) front is symmetrical with three bays. To the centre is a doorway with arched fanlight and above it is an arched, stone hood which is supported by carved brackets to the sides and further plain brackets and a keystone. The three-panel door is a replacement of later-C20 date. At either side of this central feature are single-light windows, each with a moulded stone surround and a transom, into which uPVC windows have been inserted. The first floor dormer window has a moulded wooden surround and a segment-arched top into which uPVC windows have been inserted, as before. The graduated slates of the roof rise to a central stack of cross-shaped plan. The south front is similar, but has no window to left of centre at ground floor level and has a cross window of two mullioned and transomed lights to the centre at ground floor level. The northern flank is also similar, save that the right-hand bay is blank and the left hand bay has a cross window. On the rear (east) face, the central bay does not project, but there are two projecting pilaster buttresses at either side of the central bay which has a single-light casement. The yard walling continues the banding seen on the rest of the building and encloses a single-storey laundry, boiler room and coal store. The window to the south flank of this yard building and the door to the north have both been replaced in the later-C20.

INTERIOR: There is a central corridor at ground floor level leading through to an open-well staircase at the rear. This has a closed string and ramped handrail and the doors throughout are plain, with four panels, or plank doors with diagonal bracing. A bathroom has been inserted at ground floor level and projects into the open well of the staircase. Fire surrounds at ground floor level have been removed.

HISTORY: The lodge and gates and walling are part of the overall plan for the University of Birmingham as conceived in 1900 by Aston Webb and Ingress Bell.
The university had started in 1880 as Mason College in Edmund Street, specialising in the sciences. It became Mason University College in 1898 and received its charter in 1900, at which time Joseph Chamberlain was appointed as its first chancellor. The same year Lord Calthorpe gave 25 acres of land on his Edgbaston estate and Andrew Carnegie donated £50,000 to establish a 'first class modern scientific college' on the model of Cornell University. A matching sum was given by Sir Charles Holcroft. Although not all of the planned buildings were eventually built, the extensive scheme designed by Webb and Bell was approved in full. The campus was opened by King Edward VII in 1909.
The lodge housed the gate keeper to the university campus. It is not shown on the Ordnance Survey map published in 1904, but is shown with its exact, present footprint on the OS map for 1917. A bathroom was added in the later C20 and uPVC windows have been inserted into some openings, although the original surrounds, either wood or stone, have been retained. The walling to the west of the gates has been curtailed in the early C21 and will be re-built on a new line to the north using original materials where possible.

SOURCES
Andy Foster, Pevsner Architectural Guides, Birmingham (2005), 240-245.
Alastair Service (Ed.), Edwardian Architecture and its Origins (1975), 328-338.
Eric Ives (et al), The First Civic University: Birmingham 1880-1980 (2000).

REASONS FOR DESIGNATION DECISION
The University of Birmingham Lodge, Gate, Gate Piers and Walling, Bristol Road, Birmingham are designated Grade II for the following principal reasons:

* Architectural: The buildings, designed by Aston Webb and Ingress Bell, have clear architectural quality and a stylistic relationship and group value with the principal buildings at the heart of the campus.
* Historic Interest: Birmingham was the first campus university in England and this formed one of the principal entrances to the landscape of the site.
* Intact state: Despite some alteration to the fenestration and the curtailing of a length of the original boundary wall to the west, the group remains in largely original condition, with notably little alteration to the plan of the lodge.

This text is from the original listing, and may not necessarily reflect the current setting of the building.

West Midlands Railway 730 029 and 730 020 at Selly Oak Station by ell brown

West Midlands Railway 730 029 and 730 020 at Selly Oak Station

There is no more Class 323's on the Cross City Line.

I got a West Midlands Railway Class 730 from Selly Oak to Aston one way.

Did get a bit noisy inside, but most passengers left at Birmingham New Street.


West Midlands Railway 730 029 and 730 020 at Selly Oak Station.

The Bristol Pear street art from Selly Oak Station by ell brown

The Bristol Pear street art from Selly Oak Station

The Bristol Pear street art from Selly Oak Station.

Will need to see it from Heeley Road, next time I walk that way in the area.

Towards the Bristol Road Bridge - Worcester & Birmingham Canal, Selly Oak by ell brown

Towards the Bristol Road Bridge - Worcester & Birmingham Canal, Selly Oak

On the Worcester & Birmingham Canal in Selly Oak towards the Selly Oak Shopping Park.

The best way here by foot, bike, bus or train. Later saw loads of cars queuing up at the shopping centres car park.


Towards the Bristol Road Bridge

Narrowboats at Whitehouse Wharf, Worcester & Birmingham Canal, Selly Oak by ell brown

Narrowboats at Whitehouse Wharf, Worcester & Birmingham Canal, Selly Oak

On the Worcester & Birmingham Canal in Selly Oak towards the Selly Oak Shopping Park.

The best way here by foot, bike, bus or train. Later saw loads of cars queuing up at the shopping centres car park.


Narrowboats at Whitehouse Wharf.

Bristol Road Bridge - Worcester & Birmingham Canal, Selly Oak by ell brown

Bristol Road Bridge - Worcester & Birmingham Canal, Selly Oak

On the Worcester & Birmingham Canal in Selly Oak towards the Selly Oak Shopping Park.

The best way here by foot, bike, bus or train. Later saw loads of cars queuing up at the shopping centres car park.


Bristol Road Bridge.

Tennis and hockey at the Bournbrook Sports Pitches, University of Birmingham by ell brown

Tennis and hockey at the Bournbrook Sports Pitches, University of Birmingham

Tennis and hockey at the Bournbrook Sports Pitches, University of Birmingham.

Seen on a walk after leaving the Igers Birmingham UK Instameet I went on.

These were used during the Birmingham 2022 Commonwealth Games. They have been returned back to normal.