Difference between revisions of "Swiss Cottage"

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'''Swiss Cottage''' is a generally prosperous district of [[Middlesex]] deep within the metropolitan conurbation, some 3 miles north of the middle of [[Westminster]] and just north of [[St John's Wood]]. The extent of Swiss Cottage is undefined and undefinable, but generally is centred on the junction of Avenue Road and Finchley Road, where Swiss Cottage tube station is found and the pub which gave the station its name and thence the area, now named "Ye Olde Swiss Cottage".
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'''Swiss Cottage''' is a generally prosperous district of [[Middlesex]] deep within the metropolitan conurbation, some three miles north of the middle of [[Westminster]] and just north of [[St John's Wood]]. The extent of Swiss Cottage is undefined and undefinable, but generally is centred on the junction of Avenue Road and Finchley Road, where Swiss Cottage tube station is found and the pub which gave the station its name and thence the area, now named "Ye Olde Swiss Cottage".
  
 
The area is named after an inn called ''The Swiss Tavern'' that was built in 1804 in the style of a Swiss chalet and on the site of a former tollgate keeper's cottage. The inn was later renamed ''Swiss Cottage''.<ref name="Mills">{{ cite book | title=Dictionary of London Place Names | publisher=Oxford | surname=Mills | first=A.D. | year=2001 | pages=222–223 }}</ref>
 
The area is named after an inn called ''The Swiss Tavern'' that was built in 1804 in the style of a Swiss chalet and on the site of a former tollgate keeper's cottage. The inn was later renamed ''Swiss Cottage''.<ref name="Mills">{{ cite book | title=Dictionary of London Place Names | publisher=Oxford | surname=Mills | first=A.D. | year=2001 | pages=222–223 }}</ref>
  
 
==History==
 
==History==
[[File:Ye Olde Swiss Cottage pub Swiss Cottage.jpg|left|thumb|200px|The current ''Ye Olde Swiss Cottage'' public house]]
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[[File:Ye Olde Swiss Cottage pub Swiss Cottage.jpg|thumb|250px|The current ''Ye Olde Swiss Cottage'' public house]]
 
The Swiss tavern was built in 1804.  The district formed part of the ancient parish of [[Hampstead]]. It developed following the ''Finchley Road Act 1826'', which authorised construction of Finchley New Road and Avenue Road; ''The Swiss Tavern'' stood at the junction of the roads.<ref name=bho>{{brithist|22639|'Hampstead: St John's Wood', A History of the County of Middlesex: Volume 9: Hampstead, Paddington}} (1989), pp. 60-63.</ref> The neighbourhood around Finchley Road and Avenue Road was redeveloped in 1937 and 1938 with the opening of an Odeon cinema and the Regency Lodge flats. After Second World War, local authority housing was constructed by the London County Council in the area.<ref name=bho/> On 20 March 2014,  a planning application was submitted for a 24-storey tower to be built next to Swiss Cottage tube station.<ref>http://www.camdennewjournal.com/letters/2014/mar/letters-tower-block-views…</ref>
 
The Swiss tavern was built in 1804.  The district formed part of the ancient parish of [[Hampstead]]. It developed following the ''Finchley Road Act 1826'', which authorised construction of Finchley New Road and Avenue Road; ''The Swiss Tavern'' stood at the junction of the roads.<ref name=bho>{{brithist|22639|'Hampstead: St John's Wood', A History of the County of Middlesex: Volume 9: Hampstead, Paddington}} (1989), pp. 60-63.</ref> The neighbourhood around Finchley Road and Avenue Road was redeveloped in 1937 and 1938 with the opening of an Odeon cinema and the Regency Lodge flats. After Second World War, local authority housing was constructed by the London County Council in the area.<ref name=bho/> On 20 March 2014,  a planning application was submitted for a 24-storey tower to be built next to Swiss Cottage tube station.<ref>http://www.camdennewjournal.com/letters/2014/mar/letters-tower-block-views…</ref>
  
 
==About Swiss Cottage==
 
==About Swiss Cottage==
The neighbourhoods adjoining Swiss Cottage, and contiguous with it, include [[Hampstead]] Village to the northeast, [[Chalk Farm]] and [[Camden Town]] to the southeast, [[Belsize Park]] to the east, [[St John's Wood]] to the south and West Hampstead to the west. [[Regent's Park]] is about a mile away.
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The neighbourhoods adjoining Swiss Cottage, and contiguous with it, include [[Hampstead]] Village to the northeast, [[Chalk Farm]] and [[Camden Town]] to the southeast, [[Belsize Park]] to the east, [[St John's Wood]] to the south and [[West Hampstead]] to the west. [[Regent's Park]] is about a mile away.
  
 
It is bounded by five conservation areas, named Belsize, Elsworthy, Fitzjohns-Netherhall, South Hampstead, St John's Wood (Camden) and St John's Wood (Westminster).
 
It is bounded by five conservation areas, named Belsize, Elsworthy, Fitzjohns-Netherhall, South Hampstead, St John's Wood (Camden) and St John's Wood (Westminster).

Latest revision as of 10:55, 29 April 2021

Swiss Cottage
Middlesex
Houses in Lancaster Grove, Swiss Cottage - geograph.org.uk - 38615.jpg
Lancaster Road, Swiss Cottage
Location
Grid reference: TQ266842
Location: 51°32’33"N, 0°10’24"W
Data
Post town: London
Postcode: NW3, NW6, NW8
Dialling code: 020
Local Government
Council: Camden
Parliamentary
constituency:
Hampstead and Kilburn

Swiss Cottage is a generally prosperous district of Middlesex deep within the metropolitan conurbation, some three miles north of the middle of Westminster and just north of St John's Wood. The extent of Swiss Cottage is undefined and undefinable, but generally is centred on the junction of Avenue Road and Finchley Road, where Swiss Cottage tube station is found and the pub which gave the station its name and thence the area, now named "Ye Olde Swiss Cottage".

The area is named after an inn called The Swiss Tavern that was built in 1804 in the style of a Swiss chalet and on the site of a former tollgate keeper's cottage. The inn was later renamed Swiss Cottage.[1]

History

The current Ye Olde Swiss Cottage public house

The Swiss tavern was built in 1804. The district formed part of the ancient parish of Hampstead. It developed following the Finchley Road Act 1826, which authorised construction of Finchley New Road and Avenue Road; The Swiss Tavern stood at the junction of the roads.[2] The neighbourhood around Finchley Road and Avenue Road was redeveloped in 1937 and 1938 with the opening of an Odeon cinema and the Regency Lodge flats. After Second World War, local authority housing was constructed by the London County Council in the area.[2] On 20 March 2014, a planning application was submitted for a 24-storey tower to be built next to Swiss Cottage tube station.[3]

About Swiss Cottage

The neighbourhoods adjoining Swiss Cottage, and contiguous with it, include Hampstead Village to the northeast, Chalk Farm and Camden Town to the southeast, Belsize Park to the east, St John's Wood to the south and West Hampstead to the west. Regent's Park is about a mile away.

It is bounded by five conservation areas, named Belsize, Elsworthy, Fitzjohns-Netherhall, South Hampstead, St John's Wood (Camden) and St John's Wood (Westminster).

Transport

The area is served by Swiss Cottage and Finchley Road tube stations on the Jubilee Line of the London Underground and is a local hub for buses. Swiss Cottage station was opened by the Metropolitan Railway in 1868 and the current station dates from 1939.[4] South Hampstead railway station and Finchley Road & Frognal railway station on London Overground are also nearby.

Culture

Local amenities include an Odeon Cinema, Sir Basil Spence's Grade II-listed Swiss Cottage Central Library and the Hampstead Theatre.

Swiss Cottage is the location of the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama that occasionally performs at the [Embassy Theatre. Swiss Cottage Leisure Centre reopened in early 2006 after redevelopment; it now has two swimming pools, a gym and a climbing wall.

Many of the area's cityscapes and London street scenes, particularly of Swiss Cottage, Adamson Road, Eton Avenue and Belsize Park were represented by the Camden Town Group painter Robert Bevan and his wife, the Polish painter Stanisława de Karłowska. They lived at 14 Adamson Road.

Outside links

References

  1. Mills, A.D. (2001). Dictionary of London Place Names. Oxford. pp. 222–223. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 'Hampstead: St John's Wood', A History of the County of Middlesex: Volume 9: Hampstead, Paddington (1989), pp. 60-63.
  3. http://www.camdennewjournal.com/letters/2014/mar/letters-tower-block-views…
  4. Rose, Douglas (1999). The London Underground. Douglas Rose.