Gloucester Avenue is a street in the Primrose Hill area of London, England. Located in the London Borough of Camden , it is a residential road featuring many nineteenth century properties including several pubs as well as the neo-Georgian Cecil Sharp House . For much of its route it runs adjacent to the West Coast Main Line out of Euston Station .
5-467: Its southern junction is at a crossroads with Delancey Street and Parkway which runs off east into the centre of Camden Town . Further north Regent's Park Road divides off westwards to follow alongside Primrose Hill park. Gloucester Avenue continues across the Regent's Canal and ending when it meets with Regent's Park Road which has curved round to join it again. The former Primrose Hill railway station
10-520: Is now a Grade II* listed building. Street numbers 15–31, terraced houses built in the 1840s, are Grade II listed. 51°32′27″N 0°09′07″W / 51.5407°N 0.15187°W / 51.5407; -0.15187 This London road or road transport-related article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Delancey Street, Camden Delancey Street is a mainly residential street in Camden Town , London, England. Located in
15-456: The London Borough of Camden , it runs roughly west to east in a curve from Camden High Street to Parkway . It is met or crossed by Arlington Road , Albert Street , Gloucester Avenue , and Mornington Terrace . Eastwards of Camden High Street the route continues as Pratt Street as far as the Regent's Canal . It was laid out during the first half of the nineteenth century when Camden Town
20-434: Was constructed as a new suburb of the expanding capital. The street takes its name from James Delancey who held land acquired from the aristocratic Fitzroy family who owned a large estate in the area. Until it was renamed in the 1840s it had previously been regarded as two separate sections known as Stanhope Street and Warren Street. Notable residents have included the poets Charlotte Mew and Dylan Thomas . The latter
25-517: Was located just north of the junction between the two roads until its closure in 1992. Other streets running off Gloucester Avenue include Oval Road , Princess Road and Fitzroy Road . Originally named Gloucester Road , the street was named after William, Duke of Gloucester the husband of Mary, Duchess of Gloucester , the younger sister of George IV and William IV as are the nearby Gloucester Gate and Gloucester Crescent . The 1837 Camden Incline Winding Engine House designed by Robert Stephenson
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