Action, protest, campaigns, demos and issues magazine features, photos, articles, stories photos of London, New York, Wales, England and photography features music, parties, clubs, events, records, releases drug information, harm reduction, no-nonsense guide punch a celebrity football, features, issues, cardiff city games, useless games and diversions technical info, web authoring, reviews and features site news, updates and urban75 blog urban75 community news and events urban75 bulletin boards join the chatroom search urban75 back to urban75 homepage
London features, photos, history, articles New York features, photos, history, articles Brixton features, photos, history, articles panoramas, 360 degree vistas, London, New York, Wales, England Offline London club night festival reports, photos, features and articles urban75 sitemap and page listing about us, info, FAQs, copyright join our mailing list for updates and news contact urban75

urban75 blog

...rainy streets, neon signs, disused stations and broken lines...

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

The Mystery of the Brixton Road footbridge

It started with a request by Paulie for a photo of the old footbridge in Brixton on the external link urban75 bulletin boards.

The request was met by such head scratching that posters began to fear that he'd dreamt the entire thing up because no one seemed to recall the bridge existing.

Despite the lack of forthcoming photographic proof, Paulie continued to describe the old bridge:

quoteThe bridge was pretty much on top of the pedestrian crossing which was always there (and which most people opted for). I think it survived until the mid 70s. It was a girder monstrosity with big planks laid across for the steps and bridge span - they flexed a fair bit when a bus went underneath.

To give a more accurate placing - it ran between Tunstall Road and the tube with the stairs at right angles on the south side.quote

The Brixton Footbridge, Brixton Road, London SW9. Historical photos and posters, Brixton, London SW9 8PY, 1897-2008

Happily, the poster 'haushoch' came to the rescue, unearthing a photo showing a section of the footbridge from 'London Anders Reisen' published in 1980 by Rowohlt Taschenbuch Verlag GmBH.

The photo was by Michael Kadereit, and the books were guides for tourists who didn't want to visit the typical tourist spots, but wanted a real insight into the place they were visiting.

More: The Mystery of the Brixton Road footbridge

Labels:


Link

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?



Links
Archives