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Parkland Walk

Coordinates:51°34′27″N0°07′28″W / 51.5742°N 0.1245°W /51.5742; -0.1245
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2.5-mile linear green walkway in London

Parkland Walk
Parkland Walk Haringey
Length3.1 miles (5.0km)
LocationHaringey, London
Established1984
TrailheadsAlexandra Park, Finsbury Park
UseWalking,Cycling
Websitehttps://www.parkland-walk.org.uk/
Parkland Walk

TheParkland Walk is a 3.1-mile (5.0 km) linear green pedestrian and cycle route inLondon, which follows the course of therailway line that used to run betweenFinsbury Park andAlexandra Palace, throughStroud Green,Crouch End,Highgate andMuswell Hill. It is often mistakenly described as 4.5 miles long, but even taking in the gap between the two sections it still only totals 3.1 miles (5.0 km). The route follows the bridges and cuttings of the line, but avoids the closed surface section ofHighgate station and its adjoining tunnels, which are closed to walkers for safety reasons. The walk is almost all inHaringey, but a short stretch betweenCrouch Hill andCrouch End Hill is inIslington and this section incorporatesCrouch Hill Park.[1][2][3][4][5]

The walk is alocal nature reserve and aSite of Metropolitan Importance for Nature Conservation. It was declared a local nature reserve in 1990 and is London's longest such reserve. Between Finsbury Park and Highgate, the path forms part of theCapital Ring strategic walking route.[1][2][3][4][5]

History

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The old platforms atCrouch End station.

Railway line

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The route of the path betweenFinsbury Park andHighgate was constructed originally by theEdgware, Highgate and London Railway in the 1860s, as part of its railway line fromFinsbury Park toEdgware. Before the line was opened on 22 August 1867, it was purchased by the largerGreat Northern Railway (GNR). Branch lines fromFinchley toHigh Barnet and fromHighgate toAlexandra Palace opened in 1872 and 1873. The GNR became part of theLondon & North Eastern Railway (LNER) in 1923.[6][7]

Plans were published byLondon Underground in the 1930s for the incorporation of these lines into theNorthern line (the Northern Heights Plan), but the onset ofWorld War II stopped the work at an advanced stage. After the war, the development plan was abandoned but passenger trains continued to run on this line until 3 July 1954, whenBritish Railways (the successor to the LNER) ended such services permanently. The Alexandra Palace branch closed completely in 1957, but the link from Finsbury Park to Highgate and East Finchley remained open to freight traffic until 1964. Even after freight traffic had ceased, the line continued to be used to transfer empty tube stock between lines; this ceased in 1970, because of the poor condition of some of the intermediate bridges, and the track was lifted in 1972.[6][7]

Creation of the walk

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After the track was lifted, most of the platforms and station buildings were demolished. The sections of the line from Finsbury Park to Highgate and from Highgate to Alexandra Palace, excluding the intermediate section through the tunnels and station at Highgate, were converted into the Parkland Walk. This was officially opened in 1984, following extensive re-surfacing and improvements to access. In the late 1980s, the park was threatened by a plan to build a road along its route but the plan was withdrawn following local opposition which was co-ordinated byThe Friends of the Parkland Walk.[8][better source needed]

The walk was declared alocal nature reserve in 1990.[citation needed]

Route description

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Finsbury Park to Crouch Hill

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The route starts near toFinsbury Park station, at the western side of theEast Coast Main Line, beside a foot overbridge that gives access from the eastern end of Oxford Road toFinsbury Park itself. The route rises on an embankment overlooking the back gardens of the Victorian suburban houses. The route then bridges Upper Tollington Park.

The next bridge takes the walk over Stapleton Hall Road, at a point where theGospel Oak to Barking railway line also passes beneath the road.Stroud Green station once stood at this point, with its platforms cantilevered out over the sides of the bridge over Stapleton Hall Road. The station master's house still survives at road level, but there are no traces of the track- or road-side station buildings, which were destroyed in a fire in 1967.[9]

After crossing Mount Pleasant Villas on an overbridge, the embankment gives way to a cutting as the land rises north-westwards. The route continues beneath overbridges carrying Mount View Road andCrouch Hill.

Crouch Hill to Crouch End Hill

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Parkland Walk inIslington with the Crouch Hill bridge

Immediately after passing under Crouch Hill to the left, a large block house can be seen; this was originally built to house switchgear for the Northern Heights project, as part of the plans to incorporate the line into the tube system. This has been redeveloped by adding extensions, cantilevered off the north and west sides of the existing building, and extending a short distance over the Parkland Walk. Now known asThe Cape, it is managed directly by Islington Council and houses a community energy centre, a youth centre, a new ecology centre and Ashmount School's after-school club. There is a public cafe in the building to which there is direct access from the Parkland Walk.

Passing the blockhouse, the walk enters Crouch Hill Park which spreads to the south of the old railway line. The new park has a triangular form covering an area of 25,730 square metres (277,000 sq ft), which is bounded by the walkway to the north and housing on the other sides; it is home to birds, invertebrates and bats, including some species locally uncommon or declining. It can be accessed from a number of access points on the Parkland Walk, from a public footpath called the Vicarage Path and from pedestrian entrances to the south and west of the park. A new building within the park containsAshmount School, a community primary school, andBowlers Community Nursery, which is a separate charity-run voluntary nursery.[10]

Beyond the site of the new school building, and just before Crouch End station, is a footbridge across the Parkland Walk which crossed over the railway. It was retained after the line's closure and now connects Haslemere Road in Haringey to Crouch Hill Park in Islington.

At this point, the still extant but partly overgrown platforms ofCrouch End station remain. The route passes under the site of the former station building, and the road bridge over the cutting carryingCrouch End Hill, at the far end of the platforms.

Crouch End Hill to Highgate tunnels

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Parkland Walk, near to Crouch End station

Beyond this, the cutting opens out on the northern side as the route skirts a hill, parallel to Hornsey Lane where some apartment blocks have been built. The route bridges Stanhope Road on a footbridge replacing the original structure. The route continues on an embankment to a brick-built bridge over Northwood Road, beneath which traffic can flow in only one direction at a time. The surrounding ground rises rapidly and the route becomes a cutting at the end of which the portals of the southern pair of Highgate tunnels come into view. Vestiges of line-side electrical equipment for the planned 1930s electrification of the line and part of the structure of the old Highgate station are visible through the tunnels. The tunnels are closed to pedestrian access; consequently, the main route ends here with an exit onto Holmesdale Road. Should the walker choose to proceed further, they can travel uphill along Holmesdale Road which soon joinsArchway Road; continuing along Archway Road, travelling north pastHighgate station, leads to the junction between Archway Road and Muswell Hill Road.

Cranley Gardens to Alexandra Palace

[edit]

The route between the northern end of the Highgate Tunnels and the Northern Line depot at Wellington Junction is used by trains entering the depot; the rest of the cutting aroundHighgate Wood from Wellington Junction to Cranley Gardens station is outside the wood's fence. It is not officially part of Parkland Walk and so is allowed to stay overgrown.

A further shorter section of the walk begins along Muswell Hill Road, just beyond Cranley Gardens, where the road overbridge crosses the old line. At the site of the formerCranley Gardens railway station the old trackbed has been replaced with a school and housing. The walk continues opposite, via steps down to the trackbed, towards Alexandra Palace, skirting the side of Muswell Hill. The span of the seventeen-arch viaduct over St James's Lane gives a view eastwards and southwards over London. The route ends with a pedestrian tunnel, replacing the former overbridge, which passes under the road Muswell Hill itself. At this point, Muswell Hill primary school has been built on the trackbed and the suburb'sformer railway station.

The pedestrian route by-passes the primary school and leads intoAlexandra Park, where further remains of the rail route can be seen. The formerAlexandra Palace station building still exists and is used for community purposes.[11]

Wildlife

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Flora

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No trees were permitted to grow close to the track when the railway was operational. The range of trees found today has grown up in the last fifty years. Most arrived naturally (oak,ash,birch,hawthorn,cherry,apple,holly,rowan,sycamore andyew), but a few additional species have been planted (field maple,hazel,black Italian poplar andwhite poplar).

More than three hundred species of wild flowers have been recorded on the Parkland Walk. They range from commonplace to exotic. Species sighted includeMichaelmas daisies,goldenrods,buddleia andGuernsey fleabane.

Fauna

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The great variety of plant life sustains a wide range of animals. Twenty two species ofbutterfly have been recorded.Hedgehogs benefit from the proximity of adjacent homes and occasional feedings from homeowners.Foxes are plentiful andmuntjac (a small species of deer) are seen occasionally. A colony ofslowworms thrive along the grassy embankment. More than sixty species of bird have been seen along the walk and many breed here. Parkland Walk is known to be an important site for bats in the London context,[12] providing important foraging habitat and an excellent dark commuting route. A significant bat roost is known to exist in the vicinity.


Arts & culture

[edit]

Spriggan sculpture and Stephen King

[edit]
The spriggan sculpture

Along the walk just before the disused platforms at Crouch End, a man-sized greenspriggan sculpture byMarilyn Collins has been placed in one of the alcoves of the wall at the footbridge before the formerCrouch End station.

According to a local urban legend, a ghostly 'goat-man' haunted the walk in the 1970s and 1980s. Local children playing out in the evenings would 'dare' each other to walk the Parkland Walk from the Crouch End Hill bridge to the Crouch Hill bridge in the darkness.[13] It has been suggested that the sculpture, and the Parkland Walk generally, provided the inspiration forStephen King's short story "Crouch End".[14] However, as the story was first published in 1980 and the sculpture not erected until 1993, there can be no connection between the Spriggan and the story.[15] It is possible that the walk may have inspired King, as he stayed with friend and Crouch End resident Peter Straub during the 1970s. No definite link between the Parkland Walk and the story has ever been proven.[16]

Graffiti

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London newspaperHam & High reports that "Parkland Walk has a long history as a 'spot' where well known graffiti artists decorate tunnels", seen as a positive by some local residents and the Friends of Parkland Walk.[17]

Chewing gum art trail

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In 2020, artist Ben Wilson was invited to produce a series of miniature artworks on blobs of chewing gum along the Walk. Council funding was initially mooted for the project, but when this fell through Wilson went ahead anyway. Subjects depicted on the works include a rescue dog, a jogger and aghost station from the Walk's original railway.[18]

Crouch Hill Park project

[edit]

The Islington section of the Parkland Walk formed a part of the Crouch Hill Park project, which provided improved accommodation for several institutions and reinstated an area of previously derelict parkland to the south of the Parkland Walk as a public park and nature reserve. The project included the demolition of the existing building of theBowlers Nursery and the Crouch Hill Recreation Centre, and their replacement with new building containing the relocatedAshmount School, a community primary school, and a new Bowlers Nursery. It also involved the rebuilding a blockhouse originally built to house switching gear for the never completed Northern Heights plan, and subsequently used to house a youth project. The whole project was executed at a total cost of £13m to Islington Council.[citation needed]

The project was opposed by theFriends of the Parkland Walk, theAshmount Site Action Group theHighgate Society and the20th Century Society all of whom favoured retention of the original school building on the original site offHornsey Lane. It was also opposed by the Islington Green Party. The project was supported by both the Labour and Liberal Democrat parties, by the Ashmount School governors, by Ashmount school parents and by Bowlers Nursery. When the council carried out a consultation amongst residents, two thirds of the respondents were in favour of the scheme. The project was also closely scrutinised by the Mayor of London whose consent was required as the land is specially protectedMetropolitan Open Land and further examined by the Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government who could have chosen to call the project in and hold a public inquiry but despite requests to do so, did not. Objections to the project were made both to Islington, to the Mayor of London and the Secretary of State. An application for judicial review was threatened, but in the event did not materialise.[citation needed]

Further, a formal complaint against the council for proceeding with the project was made to theLocal Government Ombudsman by the "Ashmount Site Action Group" (ASAG) but was not upheld. In the council election of 2010 all three councillors elected for the local ward, in Islington, Hillrise, (two Liberal Democrat, one Labour) had publicly declared their support for the scheme. The project was financed by Islington Council under a number of budget headings recognising that the project was contributing to the re accommodation of several different bodies. It also received a special grant due to its "low carbon" status. In particular it was expected that a significant part of the cost of reprovidingAshmount School would be raised by realising the value of the old school site onHornsey Lane. However, when Islington Council, relying on the recommendations of a planning inspector, applied to the Secretary of State for EducationMichael Gove for permission to cease to use the old site for a school, permission was refused, and the site was requisitioned, without compensation to Islington Council, for use by aFree School.[citation needed]

In order to conform with the rules for building onMetropolitan Open Land, the footprint of the new school building did not exceed that of the demolished buildings. The design includes abrown roof, climbing plants on walls, and areas of planted grassland, wild flowers and woodland. Bowlers Nursery moved into the new building in August 2012 and Ashmount School moved to the site in January 2013. Building operations at the Cape were finally completed in February 2013, two years and four months after the contract to carry out the work was signed by Islington Council. The Crouch Hill Project received a 2012BREEAM award. Factors behind this award include the use ofrain water harvesting, natural ventilation systems to keep the school building cool in summer and the setting up of an "energy centre" in the blockhouse which by means ofcombined heat and power provides district heating both for the whole site and for social housing near the site, as well as generating electricity. The main fuel used is gas, but there is also provision for the use ofbiomass in the form of woodchips. The architects werePenoyre & Prasad and the contractors wereWillmott Dixon.[19][20]

References

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  1. ^ab"Parkland Walk". London Borough of Islington. Archived fromthe original on 12 February 2015. Retrieved12 February 2015.
  2. ^ab"Parkland Walk". Local Nature Reserves. Natural England. 6 March 2013. Retrieved22 January 2014.
  3. ^ab"Map of Parkland Walk". Local Nature Reserves. Natural England. Retrieved22 January 2014.
  4. ^ab"Parkland Walk, Queen's Wood and Highgate Wood". Greenspace Information for Greater London. 2006. Archived fromthe original on 24 December 2012. Retrieved10 September 2012.
  5. ^ab"Parkland Walk Local Nature Reserve". London Borough of Haringey. Retrieved30 June 2010.
  6. ^ab"Clive's Underground Line Guides - Northern Line". Retrieved11 February 2015.
  7. ^ab"Highgate Station". Disused stations. Retrieved11 February 2015.
  8. ^"History of Parkland Walk". The Friends of the Parkland Walk. Retrieved9 April 2015.
  9. ^"Stroud Green Station".Disused Stations. Retrieved8 April 2015.
  10. ^"Bowlers Community Nursery". Bowlers Community Nursery. Retrieved8 April 2015.
  11. ^"cufos.org.uk".cufos.org.uk. Retrieved30 June 2021.
  12. ^"Bats – FRIENDS OF THE PARKLAND WALK". 20 July 2023. Retrieved13 November 2024.
  13. ^"Goatman of Parkland Walk Urban Myth Traced to Harringay".Harringay Online. 25 March 2013.
  14. ^Baker, Hazel (13 September 2014)."Spriggan in Crouch End".London Blog. Retrieved7 July 2016.
  15. ^Posted by Liz on October 9, 2013 at 12:31 in Local News and Stories from HoL; Discussions, View."The Mystery of the Parkland Walk Spriggan solved".harringayonline.com.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  16. ^"Stephen King's Crouch End".northfour.co. Archived fromthe original on 29 July 2017.
  17. ^"Graffiti on Parkland Walk a welcome change". 22 December 2011.
  18. ^"Pavement Picasso: on the trail of London's chewing gum artist".the Guardian. 7 November 2021. Retrieved17 July 2022.
  19. ^"Crouch Hill Park, London, UK".BREEAM. Archived fromthe original on 16 April 2015. Retrieved8 April 2015.
  20. ^"Crouch Hill Community Park, Islington, wins BREEAM Project of the Year". Ramboll UK Limited. Retrieved8 April 2015.

External links

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