Worcester Park | |
---|---|
![]() Christ Church with St. Philip, Cheam Common Road, Worcester Park. | |
Location withinGreater London | |
Population | 16,031 |
OS grid reference | TQ225655 |
• Charing Cross | 10.1 mi (16.3 km) NE |
London borough | |
District | |
Ceremonial county | Greater London |
Ceremonial county | |
Region | |
Country | England |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Post town | WORCESTER PARK |
Postcode district | KT4 |
Post town | SUTTON |
Postcode district | SM3 |
Dialling code | 020 |
Police | Metropolitan |
Fire | London |
Ambulance | London |
UK Parliament | |
London Assembly | |
51°22′31″N0°14′20″W / 51.3752°N 0.2390°W /51.3752; -0.2390 |
Worcester Park is a suburban town inSouth London, England. It lies in theLondon boroughs ofSutton andKingston, and partly in theSurrey borough ofEpsom and Ewell. The area is 10 miles (16 km) southwest ofCharing Cross. The suburb's population was 16,031 at the time of the2001 census. The suburb comprises the Worcester Parkward, an electoral area of the London Borough of Sutton with a population in 2011 of 11,655,[1] as well as the Cuddington ward, an electoral area of Epsom and Ewell, which had a population of 5,791 at the time of the 2001 census.[2]
The Worcester Parkpost town, which is coterminous with theKT4 postcode district, covers all of the suburb and also extends intoOld Malden. Other neighbouring localites includeKingston,Sutton,New Malden,Motspur Park,Lower Morden,Stoneleigh,Tolworth andWest Ewell.
Worcester Park railway station (London Zone 4,South Western Railway), runs trains intoLondon Waterloo and many residents commute into central London.
Many maps and postal addresses refer to a significant part ofNorth Cheam as Worcester Park, even though they have different postcodes.
TheBeverley Brook runs through Worcester Park, alongside Green Lane and past Green Lane Primary School, traversing up to Cuddington Recreation Ground. Green Lane appears in theDomesday Book. The Huntsmans Hall (now The Brook) was situated on what was the far boundary of a hunting ground forHenry VIII.
Worcester Park takes its name from the4th Earl of Worcester, who was appointed Keeper of the Great Park of Nonsuch in 1606.[3] The area was once part of the Great Park which covered around 1100 acres and was adjacent to the Little Park which containedNonsuch Palace ofHenry VIII. Both parks were originally used as deer parks. Henry VIII had obtained the land from Sir Richard de Codington.
During the ownership by Sir Richard de Codington, there was a manor house on a site which was later replaced by Worcester House and is now the site of Worcester Close. There was also a church of St. Mary on roughly the same site where the church of St Mary the Virgin, Cuddington, now stands.
In 1809 Worcester Park was acquired by William Taylor. He used a mill on the banks of theHogsmill River to continue the manufacture ofgunpowder which had been carried out on and off in the area for several decades. Manufacturing continued until the 1850s when the mill blew up.
In 1890 Worcester Park Baptist Church was formed in Longfellow Road. It moved to its present location on The Avenue in the 1950s.
The Worcester Park area was largely rural before the opening of the railway station. The majority of the district was constructed on by housing in the 1920s and 30s. The south of the district was built on in the 1960s following the closure of the Worcester Park Brick Works. Other pockets of 1960/70s development can be seen scattered across the Worcester Park area.
The Hamptons is an early 21st-centurySt James Homes estate of mainlyNew England (Colonial Revival) style housing in the northeast of Worcester Park.[4] It lies within theLondon Borough of Sutton. It was constructed in 30 acres (120,000 m2) of parkland on the former site ofsewage works and its formerlybrackenbuffer, by the sports field buffers ofMotspur Park and existing residential streets of Worcester Park.
The site has with appropriate civic engineering been converted to a conservation wetland, amphitheatre, community centre and gym,tennis courts (for residents) and a viewing platform with views to theCity of London and c. 1000 homes: apartments to largedetached houses.Dutch style/Dutch Colonial Revival houses were added towards the end of re-engineering, landscaping and construction in the ten years to 2013.
The green space itself is called Mayflower Park which includes a grass amphitheatre for performances and an area of five wetlands as a nature reserve.[5] The official public opening of the park was at the end of July 2006.[6]
In 2019 a fire destroyed Richmond house in the Hamptons development leaving 23 families homeless. A post event structural survey conducted by Probyn Miers found that the fire was able to spread at an uncontrollable speed due to multiple breaches of building regulations at design and build level by the developer Berkeley homes. They have yet to compensate the residents.
Award | Publication[7][8] |
---|---|
Best Large Development | London Evening Standard New Homes Awards 2011 |
Best Landscaping | What House? Awards 2011 |
Best Urban Landscape | New Homes and Garden Awards 2011 |
Best Development (5 star) | UK Property Awards 2010 |
Possibly belonging to T Parker & Sons, Landscapers, who were based at what is now a housing estate atgrid referenceTQ221662 beside Worcester Park Station, Parker's Field was a popular toboggan run until a housing estate was built on a large part of it in the 1970s (despite beingGreen Belt).
TheScout HQ next door to Cuddington Primary School in Salisbury Road atgrid referenceTQ215650 was built in 1958 and named Rowe Hall in honour of a long serving scout leader, "Miss Ivy Rowe". This headquarters was erected after the previous building was destroyed by arsonists and still serves the 2nd Cuddington (Rowe) Scout Group. Miss Rowe was the third-form teacher at Blakesley School, a private primary school owned by Mr and Mrs Eric Dudley, and highly esteemedAkela of the 2nd Cuddington (Blakesley) Cub pack from its founding in the early 1940s to the 1960s.
In the 1950s, the ruins of an ornamental lake with a multi-arched bridge and balustrade were still visible in the woodland at the foot of a hill in Parker's Field. The house itself was not visible, nor were there any ruins apart from the lake and some mounds of bricks. The lake itself had drained into theHogsmill River, but no source of incoming water was visible. The lake dried up in the late 1940s following the rechannelling of the river.
Close to the bridge remnant to the south-west of the bridge was a ruined domed structure, all that remains of anice house. However, it was filled with soil and other debris which prevented any investigation.
Locals presumed the house to be named "Worcester Park House", and have suggested that Blakesley School was the original house, while historical sources suggest "Worcester House".[9] However, the map of 1871 shows a building labelled "Worcester Park House" to be alongside the lake, to the west of it, on land that was, in the 1950s, overgrown with trees. Documents fromHM Land Registry show that the name of the building for Blakesley School was Worcester Court.[citation needed]
In 2011, around 78% of residents of Worcester Park ward wereWhite, with 3.6%mixed race, 4.8%Asian orBritish Asian, 2.0%Black and 3.3%Chinese or of anotherethnic group.
Cheam Common Infants and Junior schools are pre-World War II school buildings.Air raid shelters were found underground during an extension to the main building of the junior school. The school is located at the top of the high street.
A primary school on Salisbury Road in the south of the district, near the border with Stoneleigh. Near the Mead Infant and Auriol Junior Schools, over the border into Stoneleigh.
A co-educational special school catering for children and young adults with autism. Pupils range from ages 4 to 19. Located on Grafton Road, in the south-west of the district, in Epsom and Ewell.
Worcester Park is the site of the enormous launch structure built to pioneer crewed flight in the short story "The Argonauts of the Air" byH. G. Wells, written in 1895.[10]
Central Road (A2043), roughly half a mile in length forms the focal point of Worcester Park. It hosts a number of shops, stores, banks, estate agents, building societies, solicitors, restaurants, pubs, and coffee bars. The largest store is a branch of theWaitrose supermarket chain.
Along with neighbouring North Cheam, Worcester Park is a beneficiary of the Mayor of London's "Outer London Fund".[11] See section below.
During 2011/12 Worcester Park and neighbouring North Cheam won nearly £2m from the Mayor of London's Outer London Fund for improvements to the local area. Sutton Council has begun a collaborative project, steered by Councillors and community stakeholders, to spend the money on making improvements to the public realm and supporting the development and growth of businesses in the town centres.
Sutton Council's bid for the money stated that: "In The London Plan, London's Mayor recognises the strategic importance of supporting town centres as key locations for a diverse range of activities. Town centres are key nodes for effective land use and transport integration, a focus for local communities, enhance quality of life, and are key focal points for regeneration initiatives. Both Worcester Park and North Cheam are recognised as part of a network of District Centres in London by the Mayor. In this way, they play an important role in the Borough [of Sutton]. Their development is also strategic: the long term growth strategy for Sutton identified in Sutton's Core Strategy, identifies both as ‘Centres for Intensification’ where renewal will largely be achieved through residential and mixed use development." It also notes that: "Network Rail are willing to build on plans to make enhancements to Worcester Park Station, working with the Council to make a welcoming and distinctive arrival to Worcester Park."[12]
Worcester Park railway station is in Zone 4, served by theNational Rail services ofSouth Western Railway and is on the boundary with theRoyal Borough of Kingston upon Thames. Worcester Park station is a Category C station (provides important rail feeder services on a busy trunk route with between £2m and £20m in ticket revenues per annum).
The railway line runs fromLondon Waterloo, via Wimbledon and Worcester Park to Epsom, Dorking and Guildford. Worcester Park is approximately a 25-minute journey to London Waterloo by train with trains typically running every 30 minutes during the day.
There were plans to improve station facilities and rail services at Worcester Park during 2012–13. Network Rail notified Kingston council of its intention to extend the length of platforms at Worcester Park Station. This will allow extra passenger capacity as trains can be increased from 8 carriages to 10 in length.[13]
There was a petition in early 2014 to getCrossrail 2 to stop atWorcester Park railway station.[14]
Also, under the Department for Transport's Access for All scheme – a disabled access fund to create obstacle-free routes to, from and between trains – Worcester Park station was made accessible to wheelchair users and those with pushchairs etc. on both platforms, with the construction of a new footbridge containing a two lifts, one at each end.[15]
Route Number | Start of Route | End of Route | AcceptsOyster card? | Operator | Frequency | Transport Type | Oyster Zone |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
N/A | London Waterloo | Dorking | Up toEpsom station | South Western Railway | 30 Mins Off Peak | Heavy Rail/Railway | 4 |
N/A | London Waterloo | Epsom | Yes | South Western Railway | Rush Hour Only Service | Heavy Rail/Railway | 4 |
N/A | London Waterloo | Guildford | Up to Epsom station | South Western Railway | 30 Mins Off Peak | Heavy Rail/Railway | 4 |
151 | Worcester Park | Wallington | Yes | London General | 10 Mins[16] | Bus | N/A |
213 | Kingston | Sutton | Yes | London General | 10 Mins24/7[17] | Bus | N/A |
S3 | Malden Manor station | Belmont | Yes | Quality Line | Every 20 mins[18] | Bus | N/A |
SL7 | Heathrow Airport | West Croydon bus station | Yes | London General | Every Half Hour[19] | Bus | N/A |
613 | Tolworth | Glenthorne High School | Yes | London United | School Bus Service; operates only during term times[20] | Bus | N/A |
627 | Worcester Park | Woodcote Green | Yes | Arriva London | School Bus Service; operates only during term times[21] | Bus | N/A |
868 | Worcester Park | St Joseph's SchoolRosebank | No? | Edward Thomas and Son | ? no timetable listed[22] most likely aschool bus. | Bus? | N/A |
See alsoList of King George V Playing Fields (Surrey) under the entry for Worcester Park.