Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Chelsea Harbour Pier is a pier on the River Thames, in London, United Kingdom. It is located on the North Bank of the Thames, in the Sands End area of Fulham . The pier serves the redeveloped Chelsea Harbour , a former commercial wharf which has been converted to luxury residential use.
Chelsea Creek in 2006 with outlook onto Fulham gas holders. Chelsea Harbour is a prestigious mixed-use development in West London, situated in its Sands End area, along Chelsea Creek, the historic southeastern boundary of the London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham with the southwestern boundary of the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea, and opposite the site of the old Lots Road Power ...
Chelsea and Battersea in 1891, showing (left to right) Old Battersea Bridge, Albert Bridge, Victoria (now Chelsea) Bridge and Grosvenor Railway Bridge. The Red House Inn was an isolated inn on the south bank of the River Thames in the marshlands by Battersea fields, about one mile (1.6 km) east of the developed street of the prosperous farming ...
The neo-classical building was designed by William Tite. The station was connected to points between Vauxhall and London Bridge by Thames steam boats. It closed in 1848 when the railway was extended via the Nine Elms to Waterloo Viaduct to a new terminus at Waterloo (then called Waterloo Bridge).
Lanson is best known for his contributions to the commercial infrastructure of New Haven in the early 19th century, including building almost 1500 feet of the Long Wharf. An eighty-foot square pier had been constructed in the harbor in 1770-1772 to allow large ships a place to dock and unload, but the cargo had to be rowed nearly 1/3 of a mile ...
Lampl was well known in Israel and lived with his second wife, artist Wenda, dividing his time between his home in Wiltshire, London's striking new Chelsea Bridge Wharf development and Washington, D.C. He was knighted in the 1990 New Year’s Honours and was an ex-chancellor of Kingston University as well as a holder of numerous honorary degrees.
At the time, the longest single span reinforced concrete bridge in the UK. [27] 1924-8 Royal Tweed Bridge at Berwick-upon-Tweed [17] 1930-3 Hampton Court Bridge [28] 1934-7 Chelsea Bridge The first self-anchored suspension bridge in the country and the first steel bridge built by Holloways. [29] Chelsea Bridge built by Holloway Brothers (London)
It has been refurbished multiple times throughout its operating life. It is presently owned by Network Rail Infrastructure Ltd (who use Chelsea River Bridge as its official name ), and links Battersea to the extreme north-east part of Fulham, known as Chelsea Harbour or Imperial Wharf, a regenerated area on the south side of Chelsea Creek.