Weybridge
West Byfleet
Addlestone
01932 841020
01932 340042
01932 858885

Surrey UK

Surrey UKOur estate agents represent property in and around the areas of Weybridge, Byfleet and Addlestone Surrey UK, where our estate agencies are based but also in the surrounding areas of Walton-on-Thames, Chertsey, Esher and Woking.

This part of Surrey is a good base for London commuting, just a 32 minute train ride away with all this at your feet... the Tower of London, Tower Bridge, London Eye, Westminster Abbey, Buckingham Palace, St Paul's cathedral, the Cabinet War Rooms, Natural History Museum, Science Museum, V&A, the British Museum & many others, Tate Britain, Tate Modern, Madame Tussaud's, and of course the interesting parks and diverse shopping appeal.

 

Local attractions a short drive away include:

Hampton Court

Hampton Court

Hampton Court Palace promises a magical journey back through 500 years of royal history. Discover the magnificent State Apartments of Henry VIII and William III, explore 60 acres of immaculate riverside gardens and lose yourself in the world-famous maze.

 

 

 

 

Windsor Castle

Windsor CastleThe largest and oldest occupied castle in the world, is one of the Official Residences of Her Majesty the Queen. The Castle's dramatic site encapsulates 900 years of British history. It covers an area of 13 acres and contains, as well as a royal palace, a magnificent chapel and the homes and workplaces of a large number of people.

 

 

 

 

Chessington World of Adventure

Chessington World of AdventureFantasy, magic, action and adventure are on the menu for a jam packed 2003 season at Chessington World of Adventure

 

 

 

 

Thorpe Park

The Uk's fastest changing thrill park, promising an earth shattering array of red hot thrills.

Legoland

LEGOLAND®, where creativity meets fun! It's a land of surprise around every colorful corner, lively music, both whimsical and astonishingly accurate LEGO® brick models and a chance to let everyone's imagination run FREE. LEGOLAND puts the "fun" in family trips with something geared towards every family member, and dozens of things to enjoy together.

Brooklands Museum

Experience a day out to one of the UK's prime historic sites. The Brooklands 30 acre site is where motoring, aviation and innovation developed throughout the 20th Century.

Wimbledon Lawn Tennis Museum

WimbledonGain a glimpse of how the gentle game of Tennis, once all the rage on the lawns of Victorian England and with origins that go far back to medieval Royal Tennis, has become a multi-million dollar professional sport, played all over the world.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Brooklands motor museum

Constructed at Weybridge, Surrey, by wealthy landowner Hugh Locke King in 1907 Brooklands was the first purpose built motor racing circuit in the world. But this great 'wonder of the 20th century' very soon became much more than that; not only the birthplace of British motorsport but also of British aviation.

Throughout the following 80 years it was to remain a world-renowned centre of technology and engineering excellence.

Brooklands Motor MuseumThe heyday of the racing circuit was undoubtedly the 1920s and 1930s when record times were being set and broken by Malcolm Campbell, John Cobb and others in such magnificently crafted machines as Napier, Delage, Panhard, Bentley and Bugatti. Motorcycles and pedal cycles too had their devotees and many records were established on the Track. Brooklands was a very fashionable place to be seen and became known as 'the Ascot of Motorsport'.

 

 

Brooklands Motor MuseumIt was at Brooklands that A.V. Roe made the first flight in a British-built aeroplane in 1908; here that Tommy Sopwith developed and flew his Sopwith Pup and Camel; and here that the Hawker Hurricane fighter and Vickers Wellington bomber were built in World War Two. The post war years were distinguished by the achievements of the Vickers factory which produced a successful family of airliners including the Viscount and VC10 and contributed to the design and manufacture of Concorde.

 

 

A history about Weybridge

The name comes from the bridge on the highway to Chertsey, of which there is evidence as early as 1235. Weybridge, part of the Manor of Byfleet, was of small importance during the Middle Ages and, even as late as the 16th century, the inhabitants asked to be excused from conveying the royal baggage as they only had one cart! The royal baggage in question was that intended for Oatlands Palace, constructed in 1537 by Henry VIII. The palace was demolished around 1650 and many of the bricks were used to build the lock walls on the Wey Navigation. This was one of the earliest canalised rivers in England.

In the late 1670's, another great house was built by the Duke of Norfolk to the design of the celebrated architect, William Talman. It later came into the possession of Catherine Sedley, Countess of Dorchester, whose husband, the Earl of Portmore, gave it his name. The Third Earl let the house fall into ruin and all that remains now is a pair of gate piers at the end of Portmore Park Road. Nearby, Monument Green is a tiny grassy triangle at the east end of the High Street, named after the tall stone column that commemorates the Duchess of York who died in 1820. Adjacent to the Green is The Ship Inn, which still maintains its late 17th century facade.

During the eighteenth century, Weybridge had many famous residents:- The Earl of Torrington at Oatlands Park, Admiral Sir Thomas Hopson (the hero of Vigo Bay), the Hon. George Clinton at Clinton House (now part of St. Maur), Sir Thomas Riggs Popham, the inventor of the Naval semaphore, John Austin, author, Fanny Kemble, actress and Mrs. Gwyn and Mrs. Bunbury (Goldsmith's 'Jessamy Bridge' and 'Little Comedy'). In 1800 Enclosure Acts were passed for Walton & Weybrige. The main beneficiary in Weybridge being the Duke of York who greatly enlarged his Oatlands estate. In 1838, the first section of the London & Southampton Railway was opened as far as Woking and this began the transformation of Weybridge from a quiet rural backwater. Many villas belonging to wealthy city men were soon lining the slopes above Broadwater in Oatlands and those of St. George's Hill.

Behind the Roman Catholic Church of St. Charles Borromeo in Heath Road is the original chapel built in 1834/36 by James Taylor. A curious building with a dome between four embattled turrets, it was used by the exiled French King Louis Phillipe and his Queen who drove over from Claremont, Esher. Later, it was to shelter their graves and those of some of their Court, until the removal of the bodies to Dreux in France. Only the tomb of the Duchess of Nemours now remains there.

In 1907, in the fields bordering the river Wey, Hugh Locke-King, the owner of Brooklands House,built the first motor racing track in England. Here, for thirty-two years, until its destruction in the Second World War, the most famous drivers in the world competed for victory. Part of the track is still preserved and an interesting and thriving museum of motor racing and aviation stands at the site, utilising the restored Clubhouse. The oldest air booking office in the world still survives and the airfield, in the centre of the race track, saw some of the earliest flights in England. Vickers established an aircraft factory adjacent to the site which was later taken over by British Aerospace, formerly the British Aircraft Corporation. The factory built many legends including the 'Wellington Bomber', the 'Dambusters' bomb and Concorde.

Weybridge grew into a commuter town with the advent of the fast train link into London Waterloo and a lot of 'new' houses have been built around the Oatlands Park and Broadwater Lake area. The estate at St. George's Hill still remains exclusive but the old mansions have been replaced with large private residencies, one being owned by Sir Cliff Richard, who is often seen around the Weybridge area. Behind the High Street, where the Library and Elmbridge Museum reside, is a large, well-maintained park.