More from the Golden Mile, Brentford – 1990

More from the Golden Mile continues from where my previous post on my walk on Sunday 7th January 1990, Curry’s, Firestone, A Fountain & Kluwer – 1990, ended. This is my final post on this walk.

Adini, 891, Great West Rd, Isleworth, Hounslow, 1990, 90-1g-12
Adini, 891, Great West Rd, Isleworth, Hounslow, 1990, 90-1g-12

Just to the west of Syon Lane on the Great West Road in Isleworth is this 1933 Art Deco factory by Wallis, Gilbert and Partners built for William Burnett Chemicals. This was the furthest west of the 1930s commercial buildings on the new road and past it are residential properties in the north of Isleworth and Osterley.

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Adini, 891, Great West Rd, Isleworth, Hounslow, 1990, 90-1g-12

The building is I think still in use by fashion clothing firm Adini. In 2023 Hounslow Council turned down a planning application to develop the site retaining and restoring this locally listed Art Deco building but with two six storey blocks containing 51 flats on the site. The developers appealed and I am not sure of the current state of the proposal.

Softsel, 941, Great West Road, Brentford, Hounslow, 1990, 90-1h-65
Softsel, 941, Great West Road, Brentford, Hounslow, 1990, 90-1h-65

I hadn’t finished with the ‘Golden Mile’ and turned around and walked east back into Brentford along the Great West Road. 941, the occupied by Softsel was another building by Wallis, Gilbert & Partners for cosmetics company Coty.

This building is now the private Syon Clinic.

Steps, 971, Great West Road, Brentford, Hounslow, 1990, 90-1h-66
Steps, 971, Great West Road, Brentford, Hounslow, 1990, 90-1h-66

Another grand set of steps led up to the factory of Leonard Williams Ltd, who made Packard cars here from 1929. Queensway in 1990 it now leads to DFS Brentford Sofa & Furniture Store, but only these steps remain of the previous building.

Pyrene Building, Westlink House, Great West Road, Brentford, Hounslow, 1990, 90-1h-51
Pyrene Building, Westlink House, 981, Great West Road, Brentford, Hounslow, 1990, 90-1h-51

Built 1929-1930 by Wallis, Gilbert & Partners for Pyrene, makers of fire extinguishers it is Grade II listed. The main windows here had already been altered by 1990.

Pyrene Building, Westlink House, Great West Road, Brentford, Hounslow, 1990, 90-1h-44
Pyrene Building, Westlink House, Great West Road, Brentford, Hounslow, 1990, 90-1h-44

This grand entrance and the gate posts are perhaps the most interesting feature of the building. The building now provides tailor-made office space for companies of all sizes.

Pyrene Building, Westlink House, Great West Road, Brentford, Hounslow, 1990, 90-1h-44
Pyrene Building, Westlink House, Great West Road, Brentford, Hounslow, 1990, 90-1h-44

I still hadn’t quite finished with the Golden Mile, but my final pictures were a set of five pictures of the remarkable former Curry’s HQ at 991 Great West Road which featured in an earlier post – you can see them starting here on Flickr.

Grand Union Canal, Great West Rd, Brentford, Hounslow, 1990, 90-1h-34
Grand Union Canal, Great West Rd, Brentford, Hounslow, 1990, 90-1h-34

I ended my walk by with a final picture looking south from the bridge which takes the Great West Road over the here combined River Brent and the Grand Union Canal before getting away from the noise and dust of the road and walking along the canal towpath to Brentford High Street where I could catch a bus to start my journey home.


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Chiswick House & Gardens – 1989

Chiswick House & Gardens: On Wednesday 1st November 1989 I took the train to Chiswick and walked around the gardens of Chiswick House, making a brief detour to the Thames at Chiswick Mall and then returning to the gardens and then walking back to the station.

Obelisk, Chiswick House Gardens, Chiswick, Hounslow, 1989 89-10j-11
Obelisk, Chiswick House Gardens, Chiswick, Hounslow, 1989 89-10j-11

It was a place we often took our photography students for a day’s outings early in their one or two year course, a public park where they could wander freely and safely with a brief to take pictures. The park is owned by the London Borough of Hounslow and surrounds the house and the gardens are open every day and free to enter, but English Heritage charge for entry to the house. We never took the students inside.

The obelisk was erected here in 1732, but the classical sculpture on the base is much older, and had been given to Lord Burlington in 1712. It was replaced by a copy in 2006, with the original now inside the house.

Classic Bridge, Chiswick House Gardens, Chiswick, Hounslow, 1989 89-10j-14
Classic Bridge, Chiswick House Gardens, Chiswick, Hounslow, 1989 89-10j-14

The gardens changed greatly over the years as Lord Burlington and his friend William Kent who had helped in design the house in a neo-Palladian style – completed in 1729 – put in their ideas. Kent later became largely responsible for the gardens, which are one of the earliest examples of a grand English landscape garden.

But this bridge only arrived after Burlington’s death in 1753, added in 1774 to the designs of James Wyatt for Georgiana Spencer, the wife of William Cavendish, 5th Duke of Devonshire who then owned the property. It is over the Bollo Brook which runs through the gardens and was used to fill its lakes and run fountains, but later became too polluted so was culverted under the lake to continue towards the Thames close to Chiswick Bridge.

The house was probably never a comfortable place to live, having been designed primarily as a place to show off the considerable classical purchases Burlington had acquire during his three ‘Grand Tours’ as a young man and to demonstrate his devotion to the architectural ideas of Andrea Palladio which had begun on his tour of the Venice region in 1719.

Chiswick House Gardens, Chiswick, Hounslow, 1989 89-11a-53
Chiswick House Gardens, Chiswick, Hounslow, 1989 89-11a-53

Development of the gardens continued under the Cavendish family, including the building of a 300ft long conservatory in 1813 for the cultivation of camelias, then incredibly expensive and thought to be tender plants – though they grow quite well in the icy winters of Japan and the Himalayas. A formal garden in an Italian style was built around it. But this formal arrangement of hedges dates from Burlingtons own plans for the garden with vistas and statuary and columns.

Sphinx, Chiswick House Gardens, Chiswick, Hounslow, 1989 89-11a-43
Sphinx, Chiswick House Gardens, Chiswick, Hounslow, 1989 89-11a-43

The Cavendish family let out the property to various tenants and in 1892 it became a mental hospital for wealthy patients, the Chiswick Asylum until 1929 when it was sold to Middlesex County Council. After war damage the house became run by the Ministry of Works in 1948, latter English Heritage and in 2005 they formed the Chiswick House and Gardens Trust with Hounslow Council to bring management of house and gardens together.

Steps, Chiswick House, Chiswick, Hounslow, 1989 89-11b-66
Steps, Chiswick House, Chiswick, Hounslow, 1989 89-11b-66

I’d visited the house and gardens at intervals over the years, often with my family, and by 1989 the gardens were in rather better shape having been rather let go a little wild in some earlier years. On Flickr there is a very different picture taken from more or less the same viewpoint in 1978, and you can also find more pictures from a visit with my family in 1984 and with students in 1988.

Chiswick House, Chiswick, Hounslow, 1989 89-11b-51
Chiswick House, Chiswick, Hounslow, 1989 89-11b-51

I think this is another classical relic in at the entrance front of the house.

Urn, Chiswick House Gardens, Chiswick, Hounslow, 1989 89-11b-55

An urn in a very formal garden area. The next frame on Flickr shows the entire urn. I also made a very similar image in colour.

Urn, Chiswick House Gardens, Chiswick, Hounslow, 1989 89-11b-43
Urn, Chiswick House Gardens, Chiswick, Hounslow, 1989 89-11b-43

During the day there I made over 60 black and white exposures of the house and gardens, but most were rather similar to pictures I had made in earlier years and so I haven’t bothered to digitise them.


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All photographs on this page are copyright © Peter Marshall.
Contact me to buy prints or licence to reproduce.