West Bridgford

West Bridgford is a town and the administrative centre of Nottinghamshire, England. It is located in the Rushcliffe borough, immediately south of the city of Nottingham, from which it is divided by the River Trent. The population was put at 48,225 in 2018.[1] It belongs to the constituency of Rushcliffe, which is held by Ruth Edwards, a Conservative.

West Bridgford

View of Trent Bridge and Nottingham from West Bridgford
West Bridgford
Location within Nottinghamshire
Population47,109 (2011)
OS grid referenceSK 58673 37569
District
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townNOTTINGHAM
Postcode districtNG2
Dialling code0115
PoliceNottinghamshire
FireNottinghamshire
AmbulanceEast Midlands
UK Parliament

History

Most main roads in central West Bridgford are named after wealthy families that dominated its early history. There are also new developments. The roads in the Gamston development have names from the Lake District, and Compton Acres from Dorset and the Purbeck Coast.

At the end of the First World War, the Musters family sold the Trent Bridge Inn and the Trent Bridge Cricket ground to the cricket club. The club only briefly owned the inn, as it resold it at a profit to a brewery.[2] After pressure, the Musters sold land for building, but strict planning regulations were stipulated for the area then known as the West Bridgford Estate. This was planned over a grid of tree-lined streets. The main roads, such as Musters Road, had restrictions on housing density and size. All houses were specified to contain a certain number of bedrooms. Smaller houses were permitted on side streets and terraces were erected on roads such as Exchange Road for the servants of wealthy Nottingham merchants who bought property in West Bridgford.

The result is a community separate from Nottingham, with which it has no formal ties. In Nottingham, West Bridgford was sometimes dubbed "Bread and Lard Island", implying that its people had spent so much on big houses and fur coats that they can only afford to eat bread and lard.[3][4] It grew from the small village in the mid-19th century into a town with over 48,000 inhabitants by 2018.

Geography

The northern boundary of West Bridgford is the River Trent, spanned by two road bridges, Trent Bridge and Lady Bay Bridge, and two pedestrianised bridges consisting of a suspension bridge and a toll bridge near the Ferry Inn linking nearby Wilford village with The Meadows area of Nottingham city. The pedestrianised bridges link particularly well with cycling routes to Nottingham, the railway station and the university areas, making several rapid, safe, car-free routes available.

Two spans of the original medieval bridge remain, surrounded by a traffic island on the south side of the river, adjacent to Trent Bridge.

Bridges

Four bridges across the River Trent allow access to the city of Nottingham. The access to Nottingham has been an aspect of the popularity of West Bridgford as a suburb.

A road bridge with three lanes in both directions. It is highly decorated on the sides with carvings that can be seen from the river. In 2017 the bridge was fitted with permanent steel safety barriers at pavement level for the protection of pedestrians attending major sporting events nearby.

This bicycle and pedestrian bridge to the west of Trent Bridge links the town with The Meadows, Nottingham.

Since August 2015 this bridge carries part of the tram route (Nottingham Express Transit) connecting Clifton, Nottingham, Ruddington and Compton Acres suburb of West Bridgford to the centre of Nottingham and beyond. The small suburb of Silverdale is served by the adjacent ring road. The tram passes by the Becket School and travels through Compton Acres into Clifton.

  • Lady Bay Bridge
  • A two-lane road bridge, originally the rail crossing for the Midland Railway's "alternative route" from London to Nottingham via Melton Mowbray. Despite passing right through the middle of West Bridgford, mostly on a high embankment, there was never a West Bridgford station: the nearest station on the line was at Edwalton, and even that closed in July 1941, as the line itself did in May 1967. Today much of the embankment has been removed and its route built over, but part of the line's embankment has been converted into a public footpath. Some signs of railway sleepers and stones can still be seen on the path.

Architecture and housing

The central West Bridgford area has a rich diversity of buildings, mostly Victorian, although the larger properties are being demolished for development as no protection exists for the common housing stock. St. Giles Church is medieval, but heavily restored at the end of the 19th century.

Work has started on the development of 1600 houses at Sharphill and Edwalton/Tollerton triangle.

Neighbourhoods

Nearby places

Local government

There is no town or parish council.

West Bridgford was created as an urban sanitary district in 1891. It became an urban district with an elected council under the Local Government Act 1894. In 1935, the parishes of Edwalton and South Wilford were added to the urban district. This then became part of the larger borough of Rushcliffe under the Local Government Act 1972.

The town hosts the headquarters of Nottinghamshire County Council at their County Hall, a landmark on the south bank of the River Trent. Nottinghamshire County Council provides the upper tier of local government in the area.

Sport

Nottingham Forest Football Club play at the City Ground on the banks of the River Trent. The club was founded in 1865 and has played at the City Ground since 1898. Between 1975 and 1993 it was managed by Brian Clough and won a Football League title, two European Cups and four Football League Cups as well as fielding players Trevor Francis, John Robertson, Martin O'Neill, Stuart Pearce and Roy Keane.

At local level, West Bridgford also has a number of football teams for all ages. West Bridgford Colts FC are the largest FA approved football organisation in the country, running over 90 teams; the club includes West Bridgford Football Club the Senior section for Colts, which started in 2011 on Saturday afternoons in the Nottinghamshire Senior League. Also playing in the Nottinghamshire Senior League are Magdala Amateurs who play at the ROKO Ground.[5]

Trent Bridge cricket ground was first used for cricket in 1838 and hosted its first Test match in 1899, for England playing against Australia. It is the third oldest ground to be used as a Test cricket venue after Lord's in London and Eden Gardens in Calcutta, India. Trent Bridge is also home to Nottinghamshire County Cricket Club, a first-class English cricket club.

West Bridgford hosts two rowing clubs, Nottingham Rowing Club and Nottingham and Union Rowing Club, and a rowing shell manufacturers Raymond Sims Ltd. Several of the town's secondary schools feature rowing activities.

West Bridgford is home to a number of Rugby clubs, Nottingham Moderns RFC in Wilford village and West Bridgford Rugby Club. Nottingham RFC moved its training base and reserve team ground to Lady Bay after the 2005/2006 season in Ireland Road Beeston. It currently play first-team fixtures at Meadow Lane, just over Trent Bridge from West Bridgford.

West Bridgford Hockey Club in Loughborough Road was the childhood hockey club of Olympic Gold medallist and former West Bridge resident Helen Richardson-Walsh.

Retail

West Bridgford has a place in retail history as the location of the UK's first major out-of-town shopping development. In 1964, an American company called GEM opened a store on Loughborough Road. However, despite ambitious expansion plans, GEM's British operations were not a success, with only two other stores at Cross Gates, Leeds and Cliff Mill, Dundonald Street, Preston being opened. National concessionaires withdrew from the stores and, in 1966, the fledgling Asda superstore chain, whose then parent company was the Leeds, Yorkshire-based dairy farming conglomerate, Associated Dairies, acquired a controlling interest in the GEM operations. The Loughborough Road site still has an Asda store, although it was replaced by a new, much larger store on land adjacent to the old site in 1999. The original building was demolished and its site is now of the current Asda supercentre car park and petrol station area.[6]

In 2018 Rushcliffe Borough Council appointed a team to recommend improvements and changes to the town. These include better design of roads, with landscaping points to improve the movement of people from Gordon Road through to Central Avenue. Both these roads have independent retailers and national chains. Other proposals include moving Bridgford Road car park underground and putting retail space at ground level.

Education

The West Bridgford School and Rushcliffe School are secondary schools with academy status. The Becket School and The Nottingham Emmanuel School are Catholic and Church of England schools respectively, both in West Bridgford, but operated through Nottingham City Council. The Becket School is fed by primary schools around Nottingham, but only one school in West Bridgford: St Edmund Campion Catholic Primary School. The other feeder schools are Blessed Robert, St Edmund Campion, Our Lady and St Edward's.

The West Bridgford School's feeder primary schools are West Bridgford Infant and Junior School, Jesse Gray Primary School, Heymann Primary School and Greythorn Primary School. Abbey Road Primary School is the only school in West Bridgford that feeds into Rushcliffe School. Its other feeder schools are situated in Gamston, Edwalton, Lady Bay and Ruddington.

Local facilities

  • Rushcliffe Arena, extended in 2017 with a swimming pool, a gym and now the offices of Rushcliffe Borough Council
  • West Bridgford Young People's Centre, adjacent to the library, with a music studio, dance studio and other facilities.
  • West Bridgford Library
  • Bridgford Park
  • The Studio Theatre, home of West Bridgford Dramatic Society, the only registered public theatre in Rushcliffe Borough

Public transport

Bus services

Nottingham City Transport
  • 1A: Nottingham → Nottingham Station → Trent Bridge → West Bridgford (Wilford Lane) → NTU Clifton Campus → Clifton, [8]
  • 1B: Nottingham → Nottingham Station → Trent Bridge → West Bridgford (Wilford Lane) → NTU Clifton Campus → Clifton[9]
  • 3: Nottingham → Nottingham Station → West Bridgford (Wilford Lane) → Ruddington → Clifton (Farnborough Road, Southchurch Drive, Hartness Road)[10]
  • 4: NTU City Campus → Nottingham Station → Trent Bridge → West Bridgford (Wilford Lane) → NTU Clifton Campus[11]
  • 5: Nottingham → Nottingham Station → Trent Bridge → West Bridgford (Central Avenue) → Melton Road → Gamston[12]
  • 6: Nottingham → Nottingham Station → Trent Bridge → West Bridgford (Central Avenue) → Edwalton[13]
  • 7: Nottingham → Nottingham Station → Trent Bridge → West Bridgford (Central Avenue) → Abbey ParkGamston[14]
  • 7B: Gamston → Abbey Park → West Bridgford (Central Avenue) → Trent Bridge[15]
  • 9: Nottingham → Nottingham Station → Trent Bridge → West Bridgford (Central Avenue) → Compton Acres → Wilford Hill[17]
  • 9B: Nottingham → Nottingham Station → Trent Bridge → West Bridgford (Central Avenue) → Compton Acres → Wilford Hill[18]
  • 10: Nottingham → Nottingham Station → Trent Bridge → West Bridgford (Loughborough Road) → Wilford Hill → Ruddington[19]
  • 10C: Nottingham → Nottingham Station → Trent Bridge → West Bridgford (Loughborough Road) → Wilford Hill → Ruddington → Rushcliffe Country Park[20]
  • 10X: Nottingham → Nottingham Statio → Trent Bridge → West Bridgford (Loughborough Road) → Wilford Hill → Ruddington (Business Park)[21]
  • 11: Nottingham → Nottingham Station → Meadows → Trent Bridge → West Bridgford (Radcliffe Road) → Lady Bay[22]
  • 11C: Nottingham → Nottingham Station → The Meadows → Trent Bridge → West Bridgford (Radcliffe Road) → Lady Bay → Water Sports Centre[23]
  • N4: NTU City Campus → Nottingham → Nottingham Station → Trent Bridge → West Bridgford (Wilford Lane) → NTU Clifton Campus[24]
  • N6: Nottingham → Nottingham Station → Trent Bridge → West Bridgford (Central Avenue) → Wilford Hill → Compton Acres → Loughborough Road[25]
Trentbarton
  • The Cotgrave: Nottingham → West Bridgford → Cotgrave[26]
  • The Keyworth: Nottingham → West Bridgford (Melton Road) → Keyworth[27]
Nottingham Community Transport
  • L1: Nottingham → Nottingham Station → Trent Bridge → West Bridgford (Wilford Lane) → Wilford Village → Silverdale → Clifton[30]
  • L22: Gamston → West Bridgford → Ruddington → Clifton[31]
  • L23: Gamston → Clifton → Ruddington → West Bridgford[32]
Kinchbus
Centrebus
Marshalls
  • 90: Nottingham → Trent Bridge → West Bridgford (Radcliffe Road) → Radcliffe → FarndonNewark[35]
  • 90A: Nottingham → Trent Bridge → West Bridgford (Radcliffe Road) → Radcliffe → Farndon → Newark → Balderton[36]
Nottsbus Connect

West Bridgford UDC's own fleet of buses with brown and yellow livery merged with Nottingham City Transport in 1968.

Notable residents

References

  1. City Population site. Retrieved 21 April 2020.
  2. Wynne-Thomas, Peter. "A Brief History of Trent Bridge". espncricinfo.com. Retrieved 21 April 2013.
  3. http://money.independent.co.uk/property/homes/article354181.ece
  4. "Locale West Bridgford – The Open Guide to Nottingham". 14 October 2006. Archived from the original on 14 October 2006.
  5. Aroundthegrounds2012-13: Alteration to the Notts Senior League Groundhop: Aroundthegrounds2012-13: Alteration to the Notts Senior League Groundhop, accessdate: 8 February 2020.
  6. See Whysall (2005) in The International Review of Retail Distribution and Consumer Research, 15(2), 111–124).
  7. wearebase.com, Base. "Service 1 on Navy Line". www.nctx.co.uk.
  8. wearebase.com, Base. "Service 1A on Navy Line". www.nctx.co.uk.
  9. wearebase.com, Base. "Service 1B on Navy Line". www.nctx.co.uk.
  10. wearebase.com, Base. "Service 3 on Navy Line". www.nctx.co.uk.
  11. wearebase.com, Base. "Service 4 on Navy Line". www.nctx.co.uk.
  12. wearebase.com, Base. "Service 5 on Green Line". www.nctx.co.uk.
  13. wearebase.com, Base. "Service 6 on Green Line". www.nctx.co.uk.
  14. wearebase.com, Base. "Service 7 on Green Line". www.nctx.co.uk.
  15. wearebase.com, Base. "Service 7B on Green Line". www.nctx.co.uk.
  16. wearebase.com, Base. "Service 8 on Green Line". www.nctx.co.uk.
  17. wearebase.com, Base. "Service 9 on Green Line". www.nctx.co.uk.
  18. wearebase.com, Base. "Service 9B on Green Line". www.nctx.co.uk.
  19. wearebase.com, Base. "Service 10 on Green Line". www.nctx.co.uk.
  20. wearebase.com, Base. "Service 10C on Green Line". www.nctx.co.uk.
  21. wearebase.com, Base. "Service 10C on Green Line". www.nctx.co.uk.
  22. wearebase.com, Base. "Service 11 on Green Line". www.nctx.co.uk.
  23. wearebase.com, Base. "Service 11C on Green Line". www.nctx.co.uk.
  24. wearebase.com, Base. "Service N4 on Navy Line". www.nctx.co.uk.
  25. wearebase.com, Base. "Service N6 on Green Line". www.nctx.co.uk.
  26. wearebase.com, Base. "Cotgrave service run by Trentbarton". www.trentbarton.co.uk.
  27. wearebase.com, Base. "The keyworth service run by Trentbarton". www.trentbarton.co.uk.
  28. wearebase.com, Base. "The mainline service run by Trentbarton". www.trentbarton.co.uk.
  29. wearebase.com, Base. "The rushcliffe villager service run by Trentbarton". www.trentbarton.co.uk.
  30. wearebase.com, Base. "Locallink service L1 run by Nottingham Community Transport" (PDF). www.trentbarton.co.uk.
  31. wearebase.com, Base. "Locallink service L22 run by Nottingham Community Transport" (PDF). www.trentbarton.co.uk.
  32. wearebase.com, Base. "Locallink service L23 run by Nottingham Community Transport" (PDF). www.trentbarton.co.uk.
  33. wearebase.com, Base. "Service 9 run by Kinchbus". www.kinchbus.co.uk.
  34. wearebase.com, Base. "Service 19 run by Centrebus" (PDF). http://www.centrebus.info/Pages/default.aspx. External link in |website= (help)
  35. wearebase.com, Base. "Fosseway Flyer service 90 run by Marshalls" (PDF). http://www.marshallscoaches.co.uk/. External link in |website= (help)
  36. wearebase.com, Base. "Service 90A run by Marshalls" (PDF). http://www.marshallscoaches.co.uk/. External link in |website= (help)
  37. wearebase.com, Base. "Service 822 ran by Nottsbus" (PDF). http://www.nottinghamshire.gov.uk/. External link in |website= (help)
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