EAW048431 ENGLAND (1953). The Aldenham Bus Overhaul Works and housing off Sullivan Way in the snow, Elstree, 1953

© Hawlfraint cyfranwyr OpenStreetMap a thrwyddedwyd gan yr OpenStreetMap Foundation. 2024. Trwyddedir y gartograffeg fel CC BY-SA.

Delweddau cyfagos (20)

EAW048431
  0° 0m
EAW048431
  0° 0m
EAW043869
  164° 73m
EAW043870
  63° 80m
EPW016014
  141° 83m
EAW044161
  343° 85m
EAW023647
  312° 86m
EAW044163
  73° 91m
EPW053034
  55° 95m
EAW043875
  79° 161m
EAW048432
  95° 176m
EAW048432
  95° 176m
EAW044159
  106° 188m
EAW043867
  131° 203m
EAW044156
  85° 220m
EAW044158
  27° 231m
EAW044164
  97° 246m
EAW044155
  28° 283m
EAW044154
  38° 291m
EAW044154A
  38° 308m

Manylion

Pennawd [EAW048431] The Aldenham Bus Overhaul Works and housing off Sullivan Way in the snow, Elstree, 1953
Cyfeirnod EAW048431
Dyddiad February-1953
Dolen
Enw lle ELSTREE
Plwyf ELSTREE AND BOREHAMWOOD
Ardal
Gwlad ENGLAND
Dwyreiniad / Gogleddiad 516878, 194800
Hydred / Lledred -0.31081315385208, 51.639376442821
Cyfeirnod Grid Cenedlaethol TQ169948

Pinnau

Elstree Hill South (road name)

totoro
Wednesday 7th of January 2015 01:37:01 PM
Elstree Hill South (road name)

totoro
Wednesday 7th of January 2015 01:36:49 PM
Tylers Way. The M1 Motorway now runs parallel just to the North at this point.

totoro
Wednesday 7th of January 2015 01:35:41 PM
Tylers Way. The M1 Motorway now runs parallel just to the North at this point.

totoro
Wednesday 7th of January 2015 01:35:30 PM
Tylers Way. The M1 Motorway now runs parallel just to the North at this point.

totoro
Wednesday 7th of January 2015 01:35:29 PM
Sullivan Way

totoro
Wednesday 7th of January 2015 01:34:16 PM
Sullivan Way

totoro
Wednesday 7th of January 2015 01:33:57 PM
Watford Road

totoro
Wednesday 7th of January 2015 01:32:36 PM
Watford Road

totoro
Wednesday 7th of January 2015 01:32:06 PM
Aldenham Reservoir Built by the Grand Union Canal Company to control the water levels in the River Colne following the construction of the Grand Union Canal. It was hand dug by French prisoners of war between 1795 and 1797. It is the source of the stream, Tykes Water.

totoro
Wednesday 7th of January 2015 01:30:20 PM
Aldenham Reservoir Built by the Grand Union Canal Company to control the water levels in the River Colne following the construction of the Grand Union Canal. It was hand dug by French prisoners of war between 1795 and 1797. It is the source of the stream, Tykes Water.

totoro
Wednesday 7th of January 2015 01:30:10 PM
Aldenham Bus Overhaul Works The main London Transport Bus overhaul works. Actually located on the edge of Elstree, and not Aldenham despite being officially called Aldenham Works. Originally bought for the Northern line extension to Bushey Heath and almost complete at the outbreak of World War II, the railway extension works stopped. The site was used as an aircraft factory, for Handley Page Halifax bombers. After the war the Northern line plan was finally dropped in September 1949. The site was then developed for bus overhaul - much needed after the war years. The construction began in 1952 and the existing buildings were extended and converted into a bus overhaul works over a 53.3-acre (216,000 m2) site: Aldenham Works. Part of the works site was leased to British Leyland as a repair and spares storage centre. Although the site was used for repair work and preparation of new buses before 1956, the official opening was on 30 October 1956, when it had a staff of 1,800. At its peak fifty buses per week received overhaul. To save wasting road tax, London Transport had special dispensation to re-register their buses so that the registration of a vehicle arriving for overhaul would be taken off and given to the next vehicle to leave the works after overhaul. The Country buses were taken from London Transport in 1970, and by 1985 economies produced a rethink on the three-five yearly overhaul policy (preventative maintenance gave way to allowing buses to fail in service before repair work) and the workflow shrank. More modern bus bodies would distort if separated from their chassis and the basic concept of the works overhaul system had gone. Buses requiring work could now be off the road for much longer. The works was closed in November 1986. In 1986 bus maintenance moved to Chiswick (which had handled chassis renovations until 1955 when that moved to Aldenham) Demolition took place in 1996 for the Centennial Park business park. The opening ten minutes of the film Summer Holiday took place at the works.

totoro
Wednesday 7th of January 2015 01:28:46 PM
Aldenham Bus Overhaul Works The main London Transport Bus overhaul works. Actually located on the edge of Elstree, and not Aldenham despite being officially called Aldenham Works. Originally bought for the Northern line extension to Bushey Heath and almost complete at the outbreak of World War II, the railway extension works stopped. The site was used as an aircraft factory, for Handley Page Halifax bombers. After the war the Northern line plan was finally dropped in September 1949. The site was then developed for bus overhaul - much needed after the war years. The construction began in 1952 and the existing buildings were extended and converted into a bus overhaul works over a 53.3-acre (216,000 m2) site: Aldenham Works. Part of the works site was leased to British Leyland as a repair and spares storage centre. Although the site was used for repair work and preparation of new buses before 1956, the official opening was on 30 October 1956, when it had a staff of 1,800. At its peak fifty buses per week received overhaul. To save wasting road tax, London Transport had special dispensation to re-register their buses so that the registration of a vehicle arriving for overhaul would be taken off and given to the next vehicle to leave the works after overhaul. The Country buses were taken from London Transport in 1970, and by 1985 economies produced a rethink on the three-five yearly overhaul policy (preventative maintenance gave way to allowing buses to fail in service before repair work) and the workflow shrank. More modern bus bodies would distort if separated from their chassis and the basic concept of the works overhaul system had gone. Buses requiring work could now be off the road for much longer. The works was closed in November 1986. In 1986 bus maintenance moved to Chiswick (which had handled chassis renovations until 1955 when that moved to Aldenham) Demolition took place in 1996 for the Centennial Park business park. The opening ten minutes of the film Summer Holiday took place at the works.

totoro
Wednesday 7th of January 2015 01:28:37 PM