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Golden Mile (Brentford)

The gates and part of the exterior railings of the former Firestone factory, all that remains of the demolished buildings.
The frontage of the Coty Cosmetics factory on the Golden Mile portion of the Great West Road, Brentford. Designed by Wallis, Gilbert and Partners.
The Gillette Factory on the Golden Mile
The frontage of the Pyrene Building on the Golden Mile portion of the Great West Road, Brentford. Designed by Wallis, Gilbert and Partners.
The restored frontage of the former Currys office building, now occupied by JCDecaux.
Wallis House, originally designed by Wallis, Gilbert and Partners, and in 2008 the conversion to residential development was designed by Assael Architecture.

The Golden Mile is a stretch of the Great West Road north of Brentford running west from the western boundary of Chiswick in London, United Kingdom.

It was so called due to the concentration of industry along this short stretch of road. This section of the Great West Road was opened in 1925 in order to bypass the notoriously congested Brentford High Street and several factories of architectural merit were rapidly built along the road to take advantage of both the good communications it provided, and the easy availability of land for new buildings. Many examples of the Art Deco architecture remain. However, no commercial buildings could be built further west along the Great West Road (A4) after Syon Lane (Gillette Corner) as the land was owned by the Church Commissioners. Syon Lane railway station was built especially for the workers at these various factories. Land for the Great West Road was compulsorily purchased. It seems likely that housing was dictated by the 1923 (and later) Housing Acts which gave house builders incentives to build houses; also the need to have workers living near the factories.

These factories included:

This stretch of road included an illuminated, animated, advertising sign known to many drivers coming into London on the M4 motorway. The sign, showing a bottle of Lucozade emptying into a glass, was on the wall of what was the Lucozade factory, which opened in 1953 and was demolished in late 2004. The sign was removed to Gunnersbury Park Museum in September 2004 after a brief campaign to preserve it in situ. A replica was subsequently installed, then controversially removed at the end of 2015 and replaced with a digital billboard. Another memorable animated signage was of a female diver advertising Jantzen swimwear.

See also

References

  1. ^ Boddy, Bill (July 1992). "60 years of the Terraplane". Motor Sport. p. 55.
  2. ^ Boddy, Bill (October 1963). "Fragments on forgotten makes". Motor Sport. pp. 37–38.
  3. ^ Wireless to The New York Times. (17 October 1928). "FIRESTONE, IN AKRON, ADDRESSES LONDONERS - Tire Manufacturer Uses Radio for Speech at Opening of New Factory. - Article - NYTimes.com". Select.nytimes.com. Retrieved 17 October 2013.
  4. ^ a b "Central Gates, Gate Piers and Railings to the Former Firestone Factory – Hounslow – Greater London – England". British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 17 October 2013. Central gates, gate piers and railngs to the former Firestone Factory. 1928 by Wallis, Gilbert and Partners.
  5. ^ Fiona MacCarthy (20 November 2004). "Grand designs | Art and design". The Guardian. Retrieved 17 October 2013.
  6. ^ "'Erotic gherkin' company has 'form'". The Daily Telegraph. London. 25 August 2000. Trafalgar House used to own the Firestone Building on Western Avenue. Two days before the building was to be listed, it flattened that, too.

51°29′07″N 0°19′15″W / 51.4853°N 0.3208°W / 51.4853; -0.3208