This has got to be the coolest traffic island ever!
It was created during the making of the inner ring road, encasing the medieval Exe Bridge and St Edmund's Church. Both built by wealthy city merchant Nicholas Gervaise and his son Walter in 1200, completed in 1240. The church burnt down in 1832 and was rebuilt the following year.
Sorry about the pic quality. I visited yesterday in the middle of a baking hot day...and my camera didn't like it! That's my excuse, anyway!
The Church of St Edmunds, only the tower remaining. The bridge also had houses on, which were built in the 13th and 14th centuries.
Taken from the other side.
Across the bridge.
At the end of the island it can be seen where some houses where demolished to make way for the inner ring road, leaving the old walls in place. The white house in the centre of the pic is 'The House That Moved'. Rather than lose it, the whole house was encased in a timber cradle, jacked up and lifted onto wheels, and moved to it's new position along rails...up a 1 in 10 gradient! More info about it here...
http://www.exetermemories.co.uk/EM/Story_22.html
And here it is. Well worth preserving, methinks.
Cheers. Hope you enjoyed.
It was created during the making of the inner ring road, encasing the medieval Exe Bridge and St Edmund's Church. Both built by wealthy city merchant Nicholas Gervaise and his son Walter in 1200, completed in 1240. The church burnt down in 1832 and was rebuilt the following year.
Sorry about the pic quality. I visited yesterday in the middle of a baking hot day...and my camera didn't like it! That's my excuse, anyway!
The Church of St Edmunds, only the tower remaining. The bridge also had houses on, which were built in the 13th and 14th centuries.
Taken from the other side.
Across the bridge.
At the end of the island it can be seen where some houses where demolished to make way for the inner ring road, leaving the old walls in place. The white house in the centre of the pic is 'The House That Moved'. Rather than lose it, the whole house was encased in a timber cradle, jacked up and lifted onto wheels, and moved to it's new position along rails...up a 1 in 10 gradient! More info about it here...
http://www.exetermemories.co.uk/EM/Story_22.html
And here it is. Well worth preserving, methinks.
Cheers. Hope you enjoyed.