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Armitage Bridge

AC with 0 elementsGeography of HuddersfieldHolme ValleyUse British English from November 2017Villages in West Yorkshire
West Yorkshire geography stubs
Armitage Bridge viewed from Beaumont Park
Armitage Bridge viewed from Beaumont Park

Armitage Bridge is a village approximately 3 miles (4.8 km) south of Huddersfield, in the Holme Valley, West Yorkshire, England. It is situated between Berry Brow and South Crosland and straddles the River Holme. The village has a public house, a cricket club and a renowned ukulele shop.

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

Armitage Bridge
Stockwell Vale, Kirklees Berry Brow

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Wikipedia: Armitage BridgeContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 53.6185 ° E -1.7968 °
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Address

Stockwell Vale

Stockwell Vale
HD4 7NN Kirklees, Berry Brow
England, United Kingdom
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Armitage Bridge viewed from Beaumont Park
Armitage Bridge viewed from Beaumont Park
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Nearby Places

Berry Brow
Berry Brow

Berry Brow is a semi-rural village in West Yorkshire, England, situated about 2 miles (3 km) south of Huddersfield. It lies on the eastern bank of the Holme Valley and partially straddles the A616 road to Honley and Penistone. The village has a Victorian infants' and nursery school, some shops and a railway platform on the Penistone Line. It lies between Armitage Bridge, Taylor Hill and Newsome. Berry Brow is served by two public houses (The Railway and The Golden Fleece) and a liberal club. The site of a third public house, The Black Bull, was converted into an Indian restaurant in 1994, and received planning permission to expand capacity in 2011.In the bottom of the valley are two high rise buildings, built in the 1960s in an attempt to modernise the village. These reached public notoriety in the 1980s when they were found to contain high levels of asbestos, which had been built into the fabric of the building, under the regulations in force at that time. A request by Kirklees Council for money from central Government to assist with the predicted £1 million cost of removing the asbestos was rejected in February 1991.Expecting to take approximately 6 months to complete the task of removing the asbestos, Kirklees Council temporarily re-housed the tenants in other areas, the majority of whom consisted of mature and elderly residents. As the 6 months dragged on into three years, the tenants were offered more permanent housing elsewhere. The two blocks were eventually refurbished at a cost in excess of £6,000,000. They were then used to house younger single people and asylum seekers from other countries. As part of the refurbishment a 'State-of-the Art' CCTV security system was installed in 2009 to cover both buildings, as well as other locations in Dewsbury and Batley.