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Places of interest in SE12
In 1933 Sir Stephen and Lady Courtauld (née Virginia Peirano) acquired the lease of the palace site and restored the Great Hall (adding a minstrels' gallery to it) while building an elaborate home, internally in the Art Deco style. The dramatic Entrance Hall was created by the Swedish designer Rolf Engströmer. Light floods in from a spectacular glazed dome, highlighting blackbean veneer and figurative marquetry.[5]
Lee station is a suburban railway station on Burnt Ash Hill in Lee in south-east London, SE12 between Hither Green and Mottingham on the Dartford loop (also known as the Dartford via Sidcup line). It was opened by the South Eastern Railway in 1866. It is operated by Southeastern Trains, who also run all the trains that stop at the station.
The small southern part of Chinbrook Meadows became allotments, but many were in disuse in the early 1990s and a government grant paid for trees to be planted on some of the area, although some of the allotments still remain in use.[5]
Westbound platform (north)
Competing as it did with other nearby railway lines and the Underground's Piccadilly Line, the Palace Gates line was unprofitable and the line and the station were closed for passenger services on 7 January 1963 and for freight on 5 October 1964. Following closure, the embankment that housed the station and the bridge over The Broadway was removed. Nothing is left of the station.
Information by Wikipedia.com
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