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46 South End

Buildings and structures in the London Borough of Croydon
Music shop, 46 South End, Croydon
Music shop, 46 South End, Croydon

46 South End, located in South Croydon, is Croydon's oldest surviving shop. The building is Grade II listed, dating back to the 17th century. The building retains its original timber framing and the front has distinctive and attractive elevations. The rear of the building is partly of modern construction. Since 1985 it has been home to Just Flutes, a music shop.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article 46 South End (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

46 South End
South End, London Waddon (London Borough of Croydon)

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Wikipedia: 46 South EndContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.365809 ° E -0.09910509 °
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Address

Jonathan Myall Music (Just Plutes)

South End 46
CR0 1DP London, Waddon (London Borough of Croydon)
England, United Kingdom
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Website
justflutes.com

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linkWikiData (Q17508542)
linkOpenStreetMap (205406210)

Music shop, 46 South End, Croydon
Music shop, 46 South End, Croydon
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Nearby Places

Queen's Gardens, Croydon
Queen's Gardens, Croydon

The Queen's Gardens is a public garden in the centre of Croydon, South London. The gardens are bordered by Croydon Town Hall, Bernard Weatherill House, the site of the former Taberner House, Park Lane and Katharine Street. In their present form, and under their present name, the gardens and their central fountain were opened by Queen Elizabeth II in 1983. The area had previously consisted of the smaller Town Hall Gardens, and the site of Croydon's police station. The Town Hall Gardens had originally been laid out in the 1890s on the site of the disused spur railway line leading to Croydon Central station. The gardens now comprise areas of lawn with standard trees, a central fountain with benches, and a sunken garden area with formal flower beds and trees exploiting the former track bed and station wall complete with original railings on top. Situated just across from Croydon's register office, the gardens are popular for wedding photographs. A subway exits the park under Park Lane into an underground car park and across to the Fairfield Halls: the gardens are regularly used as a route between the Council offices and the underpass. The cancelled Park Place development featured proposals to radically alter the Queen's Gardens, with a more formal and modern planting style, an ice rink, space for performances and entrance into the Park Place shopping centre. The gardens remain part of the Croydon Vision 2020 regeneration plan. After Taberner House was demolished in 2014–2015, the former site was redeveloped with completion expected in late 2021. The new housing created extended into the Queen's Gardens itself and there was some concern that the former urban ornamental park had effectively been absorbed into the new project for the use of the residents.