Skip to content
A Sense of Place

A Sense of Place

  • About
  • Blog Posts
  • Collections
    • Home Life During a Pandemic
    • Fieldnotes: University stories
    • Granby 4 Streets
    • The story of A Sense of Place
    • Letters from Sarah
    • Walking and Thinking
    • Walking The Canal
    • A Book in Your Bag
    • Liverpool History
    • Liverpool Docks
    • Coming Home
    • Housing and me
    • Introducing: New Ideas
    • The Beautiful Ideas
    • Community Enterprise
    • The Clearing

Tag Archives: Chinese New Year

In Liverpool: Along Park Road

A brisk, bright but very cold day for a walk into town to do some record shopping. ‘The temperature will feel like zero’ Sarah helpfully tells me. Passing on the information from her phone which often gives her comedy weather forecasts seemingly gathered by someone looking out of a window. Undeterred I go out anyway. Not …

Continue reading “In Liverpool: Along Park Road”

Posted byRonnieFebruary 21, 2015July 21, 2020Posted ina sense of place, History, WalkingTags: Aigburth Road, Ancient Chapel of Toxteth, apartments, Bitten, Burned Out Church, Caryl Gardens, Chinese Arch, Chinese New Year, Coleman's Fire Proof Depository, Derek Hatton, Dingle, Dingle Station, Doritt Street, edgelands, Empty Homes, FACT, history, Lewis's, Liverpool 8, Liverpool Cathedral, Liverpool Chinatown, Liverpool housing, Liverpool Mutual Homes, Liverpool Overhead Railway, Liverpool Quakers, Meeting House CafĂ©, Militant, municipal housing, Onion, Park Road, Raggas, social housing, St Patrick's Park Lane, Sussex Gardens, tenements, The Dingle, the Overhead, walking17 Comments on In Liverpool: Along Park Road

Find all posts, ever

Search site

Follow A Sense of Place on WordPress.com
A Sense of Place, Blog at WordPress.com.