Berrylands is a residential neighbourhood in Surbiton, London, originally forming part of the Municipal Borough of Surbiton, and since 1965 part of the Royal Borough of Kingston upon Thames.[2][3][4] It is a suburban development situated 10.1 miles (16.3 km) south west of Charing Cross. Nearby places include Surbiton, New Malden, Old Malden, Tolworth and Chessington.[2][3][5] Berrylands railway station is 24 minutes from London Waterloo by train.[6]
Berrylands | |
---|---|
Suburb | |
Location within Greater London | |
Population | 9,437 (2011 Census. Ward)[1] |
OS grid reference | TQ195675 |
London borough | |
Ceremonial county | Greater London |
Region | |
Country | England |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Post town | Surbiton |
Postcode district | KT5 |
Dialling code | 020 |
Police | Metropolitan |
Fire | London |
Ambulance | London |
UK Parliament | |
London Assembly | |
History
editBerrylands is a settlement of Anglo-Saxon origin that is close to the Thames. Berrylands originally formed part of the Municipal Borough of Surbiton, however in 1965 it was incorporated as part of the Royal Borough of Kingston upon Thames. Most of the present housing development took place in the 1930s on the former Berrylands Farm.
Old Maps from the 1860s show the western banks of the Hogsmill River and everything around them to be mostly empty apart from a few small trails and farm buildings with no evidence of real human settlement.[7] In addition the area had absolutely no annotations of the word Berrylands to mark the area. In the late 19th and early 20th century the only prominent structure was the Regent House. It was the main building of Berrylands Farm.[8]
The land was developed around the early 1930s and was complemented in 1933 with the opening of Berrylands Station. The construction of all the homes in one go was the reason why they all look similar. The Regent House was demolished to make way for new housing, with the street where the building used to stand appropriately being named Regent Road and in some gardens, parts of the regent house's foundation are still visible.
The Surbiton Lagoon lido opened in 1934, but later closed in 1980, and then demolished at the end of the decade.[9] This area was subsequently transformed into a park now owned and managed by Kingston Council, known as Berrylands Park,[10] with a small area to the south developed into housing, creating Meldone Close.[11] By Meldone Close a small car park was also constructed.
Etymology
editBerrylands is a place-name that misleadingly suggests "land where berries grow". It actually means "land on a tumulus or hill", from Old English beorg (modern dialectal "barrow" meaning "hill"), cognate with Old Norse bergr, bjorgr and borgr which mean the same thing, and Old English land ("land"). The name was recorded as Berilendes in 1126, and as Berulind in 1148 (wrongly suggesting Old English lindr "lime-tree" as the second element), and more recently as Barrilands in 1378, which shows the true origin as being from Old English beorg. The name has occasionally been mistaken as meaning the bottom of the hill as opposed to the hill itself.
In a sense, the name corresponds to the modern English "Hill Farm", a common name for farms (and some new residences) across the United Kingdom.
Housing, shops and transport
editThere are four separate parades of shops. These are Alexandra Drive, Berrylands Road, Chiltern Drive and a smaller parade along Surbiton Hill Park. Chiltern Drive is at the centre of Berrylands, and houses over 22 businesses as well as the Berrylands public house, ‘The Berrylands’, known locally as 'The Berry'. The shops were built in the 1930s, and currently consist of a newsagents, doctors surgery, hairdressers, beauty salon, CCTV shop,[12] barbers, coffee shop, printer and bookshop, as well as the Berrylands railway station.
The neighbourhood is primarily residential. It houses a large commuter population using Transport for London travel routes, including two bus routes, the K2 and 665, and the Berrylands, Surbiton or Tolworth links to London Waterloo.
The majority of houses in the neighbourhood were built in the 1930s and have features typically[13] found in housing stock of the inter-war period. Although most houses are semi-detached there are also many detached properties and a small number of flats. On the fork of Grand Avenue and Elmbridge Avenue, there is a cluster of Modernist Art Deco houses, built as part of the Parkside estate[14] in 1934 (developer Bell). There's also a little variety in architecture with small flat blocks on Surbiton Hill Park just north of the railway station.
Geography
editBerrylands Station is the closest station to the sports ground of the London School of Economics and Political Science, which is in New Malden. There is a large water treatment plant on the opposite side of the railway. There are two large parks in Berrylands - Fishponds and Alexandra Park. Additionally nearby there is Green Lane park which is officially located within New Malden, however most locals consider it to be within Berrylands.[6]
Rivers
editThe Hogsmill River marks much of the border between Berrylands and New Malden. There is also its small tributary, a man-made brook which runs through the nature reserve on the site of the former Surbiton Lagoon and through Alexandra Park before leaving the neighbourhood.[2][3][5]
Nearby Places
editNature reserves
editRaeburn open Space
editIn 2017 The Environment Trust acquired a grant for £168,000 from Thames Water, to support a three-year community project enhancing the river habitat, creating wetland habitat, and improving the undermanaged woodland. In July 2018 a footbridge was opened to create a nature trail into previously inaccessible corners of the nature reserve. The Small River running through the nature reserves had some changes done to it, there were blocks of dirt placed in corners of the river to make it meander more and the weirs were removed. This was done to allow the fish within the river further down stream to be able to freely swim across the whole river.
The nature reserve had existed prior to 2017 but it was just a small park, with the river and some trees. Additionally there were some pathways on either side of the river bank but the only bridge was at the edge of the nature reserve at Stirling Walk. Also the Berrylands Scout Camp was situated at the edge of the nature reserve by the bridge and the scouts often used the field in that nature reserve for games. Adjacent to Raeburn open space was Berrylands Park, the former site of the Surbiton Lagoon.
Rose Walk Nature Reserve
editThere is another small nature reserve just south of the railway line at the corner of Raeburn Avenue and Surbiton Hill Park called Rose Walk Nature Reserve. It has had no large investment and is more of just a small green area where people can walk their dogs and be around nature. Its only fault being it is directly south of the South Western Main line which generates a lot of noise.
Education
editThere are a two main schools in Berrylands, these being Christ Church Primary School and Grand Avenue Primary School. Grand Avenue according to official boundaries is within Tolworth however is widely recognised alongside all the housing around it to be a part of Berrylands and most students of the school reside there.
Sport
editThe Surbiton Racket and Fitness club on Berrylands was established in 1881 - the club was founded and was known as the Berrylands Lawn Tennis Club. There were 200 members and 11 grass courts. Directly Adjacent to the Grass courts are a variety of clay courts often used by Christ Church Primary School directly south of it. Also on the other side of the grass courts there's a building which contains various squash courts which are also used occasionally by the nearby school. In Grand Avenue Primary school there's a swimming pool which on top of serving both schools in Berrylands, also does private lessons.
Berrylands Festival
editEach year the local scout group organises a summer festival opposite their scout hut on the site of the old Surbiton Lagoon, now known by Kingston Council as Berrylands Park.
References
edit- ^ "Kingston Ward population 2011". Neighbourhood Statistics. Office for National Statistics. Archived from the original on 21 October 2016. Retrieved 11 October 2016.
- ^ a b c "OS Maps: online mapping and walking, running and cycling routes". osmaps.ordnancesurvey.co.uk. Retrieved 21 February 2022.
- ^ a b c "Berrylands · Surbiton, UK". Berrylands · Surbiton, UK. Retrieved 21 February 2022.
- ^ www.kingston.gov.uk. "Search". www.kingston.gov.uk. Retrieved 21 February 2022.
- ^ a b "#GetOutside: do more in the British Outdoors". OS GetOutside. Retrieved 21 February 2022.
- ^ a b Station/Berrylands, SouthWesternRailway (21 February 2022). "Berryland Station". southwesternrailway.com.
- ^ "View map: Surrey XIII (includes: Carshalton; Malden; Morden; Sutton and Cheam.) - Ordnance Survey Six-inch England and Wales, 1842-1952". maps.nls.uk. Retrieved 21 February 2022.
- ^ "Map of Surbiton, 1894 - 1895 - Francis Frith". www.francisfrith.com. Retrieved 21 February 2022.
- ^ Surbiton Lagoon was built in 1934 closed in 1980, and was then demolished in the late 1980s Archived 3 September 2005 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Kingston Council - Berrylands Park
- ^ London Gardens Online - Berrylands Park
- ^ Berrylands CCTV website
- ^ BBC – Which era of house do people like best?
- ^ Jensen, Finn, Modernist Semis and Terraces in England, Ashgate Publishing Limited, 2012