If you take the Bakerloo Line to Maida Vale, the station exit is on the corner of Elgin Avenue and Randolph Avenue, and within a few yards of the corner I found a number of scenes that interested me enough to take a picture, including several I’ve not put online, including one of the station itself. It’s a nice Underground station, with the typical maroon tiles of the period and Grade II listed, opened in 2015, designed by Stanley Heap for the London Electric Railway but I think I felt it it would look better in colour, though I don’t think I made a colour image of its exterior.
Instead I crossed the road and walked a few yards north up Randolph Ave for this picture of Burke Electrical Services and the White Rose Laundry, both seemingly in an outhouse on the rear of the rather grandiose buildings of Elgin Avenue. All three shops in this picture are now a Starbucks, and those single-storey blocks now have two additional floors above, rather nicely blending in with the surroundings.
The left hand building of the above picture was a part of the archway leading east from Randolph Road into Elgin Mews North.
Most of the houses in Elgin Mews North seem modern, said to date from around 1984, but the gateway and those on Randolph Avenue are Grade II listed. The mews arch in an Italian Gothic style was built around 1864 but according to the listing text heavily restored and possibly reconstructed behind the facade around 1980.
A very similar pair of houses and archway are on Randolph Avenue just to the south of the Underground station, and are again Grade II listed.
According to the Victoria County History, Maida Vale gets its name from a victory in the Napoleonic Wars in 1807 when Sir John Stuart defeated the French at Maida in Calabria, and in 1810 a new pub on Edgware Road was named The Hero of Maida in his honour.
George Gutch (1790-1894) architect to the Bishops of London who owned the area made plans on a grand scale including a long avenue Portsdown Road parallel to Edgware Rd crossed by Elgin Road, but these were slow to be put into action, and it was only in the 1860s that the area began to be built up.
By this time the white stucco of earlier developments was being replaced by buildings in brick, often multicoloured which give the area its distinct look. Elgin Road was renamed Elgin Avenue in 1886, but it was only in 1939 that Portsdown Road was renamed to its current Randolph Avenue.
These long terraces are just beyond the mews in the image above.
The terrace continues for some length down Randolph Avenue.
I walked back to the tube station and Elgin Avenue, where a couple of shopfronts took may attention. The pillar dividing 294 and 296 is spiral, like those Italianate examples in Randolph Avenue.
And a little further east there was a blind stating ‘312 MEN’ above quite a few images of women which probably amused me slightly.
I walked out of Maida Vale across the Edgware Road and into St John’s Wood – where my next post from 1988 will continue. You can click on any of the images here to see a larger version in my album 1988 London Photos and browse the album from there.
Hi,
interesting photo. My interest in Randolph Avenue, formerly Portsdown rd pre 1945/ . 20 years ago I wrote a book on the Vale Special car built in 1932/3 behind the Warringon Hotel, in what was then the Warrington Garage. It was demolished late 90s and a multi storey was built next to the Warrington Hotel. prior to that it had been a tyre depot. Would you have any photos of that building, as I think it was still standing in 1988 (just about). I have a web site for the Vale Car from 1932 if you are interested….www.valespecial.net
thanks, Dave Cox
I’ve had a look through my contact prints and have found nothing I’m afraid.
Hi Peter,
thanks for looking. The building that now occupies the spot behind the Warrington Hotel is Europa House, 79 a Randolph Avenue. before that I think it was a tyre depot, before that (pre war)a commercial car garage with the vale motor company on the first floor with car access by a lift, and before that it was a horse drawn cab repair business.If you get a chance to look at the web site http://www.valespecial.net you will see an advert for the company in the photo galleries, and photos of the cars in 1932/3
regards Dave