place

Gloucester TMD

England rail transport stubsRail transport in GloucestershireRailway depots in EnglandUse British English from December 2016
Gloucester Horton Road rail depot (geograph 3620077)
Gloucester Horton Road rail depot (geograph 3620077)

Gloucester TMD is a traction maintenance depot located in Gloucester, Gloucestershire, England. The depot is situated on the Great Western Main Line and is on the north side of the line to the east of Gloucester station.The depot code is GL.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Gloucester TMD (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Gloucester TMD
Pillowell Drive, Gloucester

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Gloucester TMDContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.8632 ° E -2.2305 °
placeShow on map

Address

Horton Road Depot

Pillowell Drive
GL1 3NW Gloucester
England, United Kingdom
mapOpen on Google Maps

Gloucester Horton Road rail depot (geograph 3620077)
Gloucester Horton Road rail depot (geograph 3620077)
Share experience

Nearby Places

Hillfield House
Hillfield House

Hillfield House is a grade II listed house in Denmark Road, Gloucester, in England. The building, in the Italianate style popularised by Charles Barry, is faced in ashlar Bath stone, with a centrally placed tower and a porte-cochère entrance.It was built in 1867–69 by Albert Estcourt to a design by John Giles for the timber merchant Charles Walker, and replaced an earlier house of 1826 known as Woodbine Hill. One source states that the previous building was a "classical villa which dates back to around 1820". It once had extensive grounds, but these are now a park known as Hillfield Gardens. The description in December 2020 stated: "Now a Council-owned public park covering about 1.6 hectares, Highfield Gardens is supported by an active Friends group which organises annual events".During WW I the property was used as an emergency hospital. Between 1933 and 2014, the house was occupied as offices by local government agencies. A survey in 2014 "described the house as a "classical villa which dates back to around 1820 and is of significant historical value to the city".The historic listing described the building as "a good example of a mid C19 villa, particularly notable for its fine interior" and another source called it the "most elaborate Victorian house in Gloucester".The gates and lodge to the former entrance from London Road have also been Grade II listed, since 1998. The summary states: "Entrance gates to public gardens, formerly the gates to the grounds... ashlar piers and balustrade, wrought-iron gates. Carriage gateway and pedestrian gateway to right set back between short quadrant balustrades".