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St. Leonards!

Difficulty Leisurely

Walking time 1 hour 40 minutes

Length 5.5km / 3.4mi

Route developer: chris smith

Route checker: sue priest

Start location St Leonards Station
Route Summary Sea, street art, (incluidng a Banksy) fabulous regency architecture,grand art deco, aristocratic parkland, the rich, the poor, the trendy and all within a kilometre of St Leonards Station! Walk can be shortened to about 2.5 miles.
*move mouse over graph to see points on route
Getting there

Trains run half  hourly from London Charing Cross. Fast time 90 minutes

Trains run hourly from Ashford

Trains run frequently from Brighton, Lewes and Eastbourne. 

It is also possible to travel from London Victoria, although this is slower than the route from Charing Cross.

For bus and train times see Traveline South East


 

Description

[1]  Walk straight across the forecourt and walk down Western Road ahead (Do not take Kings Road, which goes off slightly to the right.)

Notice that you can already see that there are businesses which cater for people with little money and those that cater for more trendy people with a little more money, side by side.

Take the first left into Warrior Gardens and walk up about 10 metres. Notice, on the wall of the building on the corner is our first piece of street art.  There is a  fortress on your right..  Locals suggest that it was either a water treatment plant or something to do with electricity.

Continue up Warrior Gardens. Take the second turning on the right, Warrior Square.  Walk down to the square itself and take the first entrance on the right  into the gardens.

The site of Warrior square was opened as a subscription garden in 1852. The Council purchased a strip of land at the southernmost tip to erect a statue of Queen Victoria in 1902. All but the uppermost rose garden was acquired by the Council in 1920 with the upper garden being donated to the Council in 1930”  

Walk diagonally across the gardens, taking any route that you fancy, so that you end up at the bottom end of the gardens on the opposite side. Have a look at the delightfully named Bumptious Mansions at number 15.

On arrival, you may want to do a little diversion to your left to look at a classic statue of Queen Victoria looking, as usual “Not amused”. This may be because she was shot in the knee by aircraft in the 1939-45 war. The hole remains.

Cross the road and turn right along the promenade.

Just to your left (to the right of Queen Victoria) is a sculpture with a number of hooks on it, to which members of the public have added locks, necklaces and other things significant to them.  Behind you can see the pier, currently derelict but being renovated.

Your route takes you on top of the promenade, but notice that there is a double deck promenade here.  The lower part is called Bottle Alley not, as you might think, because of the street drinkers, but because the wall in the eastern part has huge amounts of bits of bottles embedded in it.  These were set in the concrete when the promenade was built in the 1930s.  Bottle collectors can find bits of bottle now long gone.

Soon the huge bulk of Marine Court becomes visible.  See below for more information about this.

Cross the road at the beginning of Marine Court to have a look at the various businesses that have set up to try their luck in the shops on the ground floor.  Cross back at the end of the court to re-join the promenade.  Continue in the same direction.

Pass the Royal Victoria Hotel on your right.   This is the first building on the walk that dates from the original building of St Leonards as an exclusive seaside development by James Burton, starting in 1828.  Every seaside development must have a hotel for short term visitors and this grand edifice was designed to be the landmark building in the development.  You can still stay in it.

Pass Crown House on your right.  This was the first building in Burton’s development. James Burton lived here during the construction of the town.

[2] Come to St Leonard’s parish church on your right. The church was substantially reconstructed after war time bomb damage.On your left you will see steps leading down to the beach.  Take these.  Turn right at the bottom and right again to the rear of the steps.

The street art here is generally accepted as being by the famous graffiti artist Banksy. Notice that the work has been covered over to protect it.  Graffiti art protected from graffiti?  How post-modern is that?

Climb back up the steps and carefully cross the road. Walk up to St Leonards church.  The left of the church is a steep set of steps which winds up the hill.  Take the steps to the road at the top. Turn left along West Hill Road.  This is part of the later Victorian development of the area. Take the first on the right (Boscobel Road) and walk up the hill.

On your right is the Highlands Hotel, now a guest house and bar open to non residents but originally a building with grander pretentions.  This is the first of a number of grand buildings that you will pass built in local sandstone. Have a look at the old stables, seen through a high archway. During the walk you can see contrasts between the grandiose high Victorian style which contrasts with the more sober Georgian form, even though some of the work in the Georgian style was built in the early years of Victoria’s reign. Boscobel Road and Pevensey Road contain grand examples of both.

Turn right into Pevensey Road. 

[3] Turn right at the next junction down  Highlands Drive (Note the ventilation shaft for the railway at the junction.  It must have been interesting in the days of steam trains.) Have a look at the great edifice of the Highlands on your right.  It is now in flats.

Turn left down Archery Road  As part of the original St Leonards development there were grand villas and gardens in within the area bounded by Archery Road.  In the 1960’s these were torn down and replaced by Hastings College.  This development gave rise to the Burton St Leonard’s Society  Now the college has moved and developers want to build flats and houses there.  The first scheme was rejected as being a gross overdevelopment of the site.  At the time of writing a further development was being considered.  Let’s hope it fits in

Then left into the Mount . This crescent of houses was designed by Decimus Burton, the son of James.  The tennis court is on the site of an ornamental garden. Follow the Mount round the back of the tennis court to return to Archery Road.  Turn left.  Notice the (currently derelict) Archery Villas on your right ..  These villas were also designed by Decimus Burton.  They have been used for educational purposes since 1861 and were part of Hastings College after the 1960s.  Developers now want to turn them back into housing

Turn right down Quarry Hill. Come to a group of buildings from Burton’s St Leonards,,including the assembly rooms and the South Lodge.  Just to the west of the South Lodge is a Burton double Villa.  Turn left through an arch in the South Lodge to come to St Leonards Gardens.

James Burton was involved in setting out Regent’s Park in London and the idea there, as here, was to set out a number of grand houses in and around parkland.  You can see some of the houses on your right. What looks like a church in front of you is, in fact, Clock House, A wonderful gothic edifice designed by James Burton as a residence.a villa fronting onto the park on three sides.

Walk ahead uphill through the park.  Pick any route that looks interesting.    At the top end of the park you come to the North Lodge It was once the home of Henry Rider Haggard who wrote King Solomon’s Mines. Originally a toll gate for the toll road that ran from here to the London road. 

Before passing through it you may want to turn right along Maze Hill to look at the rear of Clock House and the Uplands Villas although the Uplands are difficult to see from the road.

Walk through the archway of the North Lodge and then past the former home of Alan Turing on the right. Alan Turing, who was a  mathematician, logician, cryptanalyst and computer scientist who was heavily involved in the breaking of German codes in the second world war  He was officially persecuted after the war for his sexuality and is believed to have killed himself as a result of this.

To take a short cut, turn right before the churchi nto Pevensey Road and immediately right again down Kenilworth Road.  Rejoin the main route at the junction with Rothsay Road.

[4] Otherwise cross Pevensey Road and pass the Church of St John the Evangelist.  Then take the next turning right (Brittany Road)

You are now heading into the later development of Upper St Leonards. Notice the fairly tasteless infill pseudo Georgian building in places.  There is quite a lot of infill in Upper St Leonards. Some of this may be the result of bomb damage.  The town was heavily bombed during the 1939-45 war.

Cross Dane Road and continue ahead with Markwick Gardens  on your leftOnce a private garden for residents, the gardens are now open to anyone who joints the Markwick Gardens Association, but the membership is a bit steep for anyone who will not be using the garden a lot.  The walk goes up the east side, which has mainly later Victorian housing.  You may want to have a look at the west side of the gardens, where there are houses of an earlier period.

[5] Take the next right into Charles Road and arrive at Gensing Gardens   You can take any route that you like through the gardens, but you need to end up at the other end of the Gardens and turn back into Charles Road again. Continue along Charles Road, which bears left when it meets Dane Road.

[6] Cross Pevensey Road again and head down Cardiff Road.  There are no sights as such in the next stretch, but you might want to read the section below “Regeneration or Degeneration?”  Turn right into Stockleigh Road and then left into Carrisbroke Road and first left into Rothsay Road. Turn left at the end into Kenilworth Road.

The alternative route re-joins the main route here.  If you are following the alternative look for Rothsay Road on your left.  This will signal that you are back on the main route.  Keep straight ahead.

At the next junction Silchester Road goes off to the left.  But you turn RIGHT here up a tarmacked path past modern houses.  At the end of the path turn left.

You will see a junction.  It is worth taking the left hand fork to look at the houses in the Lawns ( Decimus again.)  At the beginning of 2014 it would cost about £500,000  for a house, but some of the places are in flats. Often the gate at the end of the Lawns is unlocked, letting you out into Stanhope Street – if not you will have to retrace your steps to the junction, turning left and then left again.

The houses in Stanhope Street were built for the workers who were to provide services for Burton’s town. Although these houses were comparatively modest, you can see that gentrification has taken place.

[7] Turn right at the end of Stanhope Street, by the Hastings Mosque.  You are now in Mercatoria, where services for Burton’s St Leonards were to be provided. The Horse and Groom is on the right. The oldest pub in St Leonards, built for the workers building Burton’s St Leonards. Sells Harveys too. Turn left into Norman Road  Originally built for the working classes serving St Leonards, now trend central, with a soviet art gallery, trendy café’s, fashionable clothes shops, antiques and a mural of the top half of Prince Charles’s head.

Walk down Norman Road and come to a junction with a main road (London Road).  Turn left along London Road and then diagonally right along Kings Road to return to the station.

Where else could you finish?  The street that sums up modern St Leonards. Shops selling the very basics next to upmarket goods stores, charity shops next to antique stores, a couple of shops selling alcohol for alcoholics just down the road from a wine shop selling bottles with price tags in 3 figures.  (Nearly) All St Leonards life is here.





 

POI information

St Leonard’s was conceived as an exclusive seaside development at the very end of the Georgian period. During the 19th century the town expanded and merged with nearby Hastings.  In the second half of the 20th century holidaymaking by the sea in Britain declined and the area suffered.  Slow rail journeys meant that the town was unable to attract affluent commuters and the geography of the area meant that the town found it difficult to develop new industry.  The cheapness of the housing attracted slum landlords and by the beginning of the 21st century the central St Leonard’s ward, which is the scene for much of this walk, was one of the very poorest in the whole country.  But in the last few years cheap attractive housing has drawn in artists and others priced out of East London and Brighton.

You will see lots of evidence of these trends on the walk.

The station was built by the South Eastern Railway in 1851.  The station building on the south side is original.  The railway company were defrauded by the contractor building the line, who built many of the tunnels on the line to a poor standard.  The company had to line the tunnels which made them smaller.  For a long time special trains were used, but now the track has been singled through many of the tunnels.  This makes train times much longer and communications more difficult.

Marine Court This huge art deco block of flats was completed in 1937 and at the time was the tallest block of flats in the UK.  It was built on the site of a number of Georgian houses that were part of the Burtons’ original St Leonards.  In its design it reflects that famous ocean liners that were so much a part of the 1930’s

It is clearly a design classic but the flats are small and the ones at the back are dark and pokey.  Its recent history is typical of that of many large blocks of flats.  Blocks like this are owned by a freeholder who may grant residents leases of 99 years or even more, or may let the flats on short term tenancies.  While there are a large number of tenants the freeholder runs the property down, because the tenants cannot be made to pay directly for repairs.

However when there are a significant number of leaseholders the landlord starts doing repairs, because the leaseholders must either pay for the repairs or lose their flats.  Sometimes the freeholder swindles the leaseholders by getting associated companies to do the work at inflated rates, although Marine Court never got to this stage.

A response to this is for leaseholders to get together to buy the freehold.  This has happened at Marine Court where a company controlled by leaseholders now owns the building.  However the company may not be acting in the interests of all the residents.  In order to do repairs sums up to £30k have apparently been demanded from leaseholders.  This is fine for affluent owners of the more expensive flats at the front, who will see the values of their flats increase in value, but tough on residents at the back, where the flats are only worth about £90k and are not likely to increase in value much.  It is also tough on those who cannot lay their hands on the money.

The writer Ian Sinclair has a second home in the block and his novel “Dining on Stones” features it.

 

G?ENERATION OR DEGENERATION?

There are no single “points of interest” in the area just south of waypoint 6, between Pevensey Road and Kenilworth Road, but this area is, in some ways, the most interesting area on the walk, because it summarises the issues facing St Leonards and its residents.  This area, like much of the walk outside of Burton St Leonards, is in the central St Leonards council ward, a ward with some of the highest deprivation in England.

As you walk through the area you can see that it consists of tall thin Victorian buildings.  They have hardly any back gardens.  This means that they are not very suitable for single family housing.  They can be converted to flats but anyone doing a conversion would need to be fairly sure that they would get back the money they put in.  Because property prices in the area have been so low on account of poor job prospects many “respectable” developers have been deterred.

Hastings and St Leonards still has a problem with houses left empty, but there are also many places that have been bought by slum landlords and either converted cheaply and badly into flats, or left as bedsits, a form of housing which is almost dead in many parts of the south-east.

The problem has occurred in many seaside towns in Kent as well.  In recent years many south east London councils have been tempted to give people they could not house or who caused them problems a one way ticket to Hastings or Kentish towns to get rid of them.  Landlords therefore had a ready market for cheap, poor accommodation.   Recent government benefit reforms tend to make the problem worse.   And once an area gets a reputation for problems people try to leave if they can, forcing rents and standards down still further.

The standard remedy for turning this round is for councils or housing associations to start buying up property in the area and managing it responsibility.  The local large housing association has started doing this and the council has undertaken a number of initiatives in the ward to promote good order and community life.  It is hoped that this will start to make people want to live in the area again.

But who is going to want to live in these properties?  In Brighton there are a lot of similar tall thin houses.  Here this type of housing is sought after by students and young mobile professionals, including a large lesbian and gay community.  Can St Leonards attract these groups of people?  There is no big university, although Hastings has managed to persuade Brighton University to outstation some of its courses in the town.  The poor train links make things difficult for mobile professionals.  As you can see the town is becoming attractive to some people, including artists, who like the old housing and the boho vibe and are not too worried about commuting or a slightly gritty atmosphere.  Is this enough?  Is it desirable?  When they have children of secondary school age will the like the schools enough to stay?  40% of employment locally is in the public sector.  With government attacks on this will the economy contract further?  If housing does improve, what will happen to the people who can no longer afford to pay for it?

All this is being played out in the streets you are walking through.  What do you think is happening?

Notes

This is not a health walk.  You will be stopping to look at things too much. The walk is all on tarmac, but there are a number of hills and some steep steps.

Ordnance Survey maps: Explorer series number 124

Refreshments: Numerous in the first and last parts of the walk  My favourites are the traditional café by the railway station (closes mid-afternoon), “Relax” under Marine Court and the Love Café on the corner of Norman Road and London Road.

Public toilets: National rail reports that there are toilets on the station. There is a public toilet in Warrior Square.

 St Leonards Parish Church: The church was substantially reconstructed after war time bomb damage.  It is open Mondays 10-1 (not bank holidays) and Saturdays 10-12

hese buildings are behind the Victoria Hotel.  The assembly rooms. behind the Victoria Hotel, were the site of social activities in the new town. The south Lodge is the southern entrance to the park and is now the home of the Burton St Leonards Society. It is open Wednesday  11am - 2pm, Saturday   11am - 4pm,  Sunday:   1pm - 3pm.  Just to the east is one of the orginal double villas designed by Burton.

Acknowledgements No details available.
  • The Assembly Rooms
    The Assembly Rooms
    By - Chris Smith
  • Clock House
    Clock House
    By - Chris Smith
  • Crown House
    Crown House
    By - Chris Smith
  • Hastings Pier
    Hastings Pier
    By - Chris Smith
  • High Victoriana
    High Victoriana
    By - Chris Smith
  • The Highlands
    The Highlands
    By - Chris Smith
  • Lion in the Lawns
    Lion in the Lawns
    By - Chris Smith
  • Lock Sculpture
    Lock Sculpture
    By - Chris Smith
  • Marine Court 1
    Marine Court 1
    By - Chris Smith
  • House on Maze Hill
    House on Maze Hill
    By - Chris Smith
  • Marine Court 2
    Marine Court 2
    By - Chris Smith
  • The Highlands
    The Highlands
    By - Chris Smith
  • North Gate House
    North Gate House
    By - Chris Smith
  • Queen Victoria, Still not amused
    Queen Victoria, Still not amused
    By - Chris Smith
  • South Lodge
    South Lodge
    By - Chris Smith
  • St Leonards Hotel
    St Leonards Hotel
    By - Chris Smith
  • A Banksy
    A Banksy
    By - Chris Smith
  • Arts and Crafts Housing
    Arts and Crafts Housing
    By - Chris Smith
  • St Leonards Parish Church
    St Leonards Parish Church
    By - Chris Smith
  • Stanhope Place
    Stanhope Place
    By - Chris Smith
  • Street Art, Warrior Gardens
    Street Art, Warrior Gardens
    By - Chris Smith
  • The gardens
    The gardens
    By - Chris Smith
  • The Lawns
    The Lawns
    By - Chris Smith
  • Warrior Gardens
    Warrior Gardens
    By - Chris Smith
  • Gensing Gardens in the Spring
    Gensing Gardens in the Spring
    By - Chris Smith
  • Seaside
    Seaside
    By - Chris Smith
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