Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Challney is a district in Luton, in the Luton district, in the ceremonial county of Bedfordshire, England, off the main arterial road leading from Luton into Dunstable.The area is roughly bounded by Rodheath, Stoneygate Road, Roman Road, and Beechwood Road to the north, Hatters Way to the south, the M1 to the west, and Waller Avenue and Chaul End Lane to the east.
Map of places in Bedfordshire compiled from this list ... Chaul End; Church End, Arlesey; Church End, Totternhoe; ... Luton Hoo; Luton Museum & Art Gallery ...
Maidenhall is not mentioned in the final revision of The Story of Luton, [3] which is considered to be the definitive history of the town. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] [ 6 ] The area is roughly bounded by the Midland Main Line to the north, Hatters Way to the south, Roman Road, Beechwood Road, Waller Avenue and Chaul End Lane to the west, and Highfield Road and ...
Chaul End was a temporary railway halt on the Great Northern Railway's branch line from Welwyn which served a munitions factory near Luton during the First World War. The station site has been reused as part of the Luton to Dunstable Busway .
Ayot station. Luton was said at the time to be the largest town in England not connected to a railway or a canal. [6] [note 2] Local interests complained that they did not have a good transport system for their products, A meeting in Luton in 1845 resolved that the solution for their town was not a branch line giving a roundabout connection, but a London to Manchester main line railway via Luton.
Signpost in Stockport, seen in 2006, showing A6 distances to London (182 miles) and Carlisle (119 miles). The A6 is one of the main north–south roads in England.It runs from Luton in Bedfordshire to Carlisle in Cumbria, although it formerly started at a junction with the A1 at Barnet in north London, and is described as running from London to Carlisle.
The A56 is a road in England which extends between the city of Chester in Cheshire and the village of Broughton in North Yorkshire.The road contains a mixture of single and dual carriageway sections, and traverses environments as diverse as the dense urban sprawl of inner city Manchester and the lightly populated region of rural east Lancashire.
The first section of the A1081 runs south-west from Luton Airport to the spur of the M1 motorway on the southern outskirts of Luton. This section is a dual carriageway known as New Airport Way . Just west of the airport, there is a junction with the A505 .