Park Langley
Coordinates: 51°23′08″N 0°00′31″W / 51.385466°N 0.008712°W
Park Langley is a suburb of Beckenham, London which was first developed in the 1900s on the historic Langley Park Estate by H & G Taylor Builders.
The initial phase (1909–1913) was laid out under the influence of the garden city movement with individual houses in a generous sylvan landscape. The layout of the estate and the design of most of the houses was entrusted to Reginald C Fry. Other architects who designed houses for this initial phase were Edgar Underwood, H. T. Bromley, Sothern Dexter, and Durrans & Groves.
The first roads to be laid out were Wickham Way, Elwill Way and Hayes Way in 1909. Malmains Way, Whitecroft Way and Styles Way followed in 1910. Around 80 houses were complete by 1914 although by that time H & G Taylor had been succeeded by The London and Kent Estate Ltd. This initial phase of the estate was designated a Conservation Area in 1989.
The estate development included a golf club (opened 1910) housed in the old LangleyPark Mansion and a tennis club. The mansion was destroyed by fire in 1913.
The estates most historically interesting house is 2 Whitecroft Way by Reginald C Fry – the design for which won the Ideal Home competition in 1911 and was erected at Olympia in the Ideal Home Show of 1912.[1]
The famous Langley Park Garage (Chinese Garage) adjoins the first phase of the Park Langley suburb but was not part of its development.
Recent developments
In the last 10 years a number of new homes have been developed in the area in the gated communities of Langley Park and Langley Waterside.
In August 2012, Bromley Council granted planning permission for Langley Court, a £150 million regeneration scheme in Beckenham by the developers Altessen (a joint venture between Altyon and Essential Land). More information can be found at http://www.langley-court.co.uk.
Sport & Leisure
Beccehamians RFC a Rugby Union Club founded in 1933 plays competitive rugby at the bottom of Corkscrew Hill.[2]
References
- ↑ The Ideal Home Through the Twentieth Century, Deborah S Ryan, 1997
- ↑ Beccehamians RFC