![Selfridges](/staticarchive/62778a3c069533645677b867d33f75e8539c9c30.jpg) |
Holloway Head |
Holloway Head and Bath Row used to contain row after
row of back to back terraces which a quarter of Birmingham's residents
lived in at the turn of the 20th century.
Many of these houses were bombed in World War II and
the rest were completely demolished in the 1960s. They were considered
slums in 1960s because the houses had outside loos and no bathroom! The
city's poorest residents lived in them. However, when they were built
in the late 1800s, they were modern and popular houses.
![Pagoda on Holloway Circus](/staticarchive/2f6823a3235768718a313336753a1b3d6e800bbb.jpg) |
Pagoda on Holloway Circus |
Only one courtyard of back to backs remains in Birmingham
city centre - court 15 on the corner of Hurst Street and Inge Street,
next to the Hippodrome theatre. It's been restored by the Birmingham Conservation
Trust and the National Trust and is now open to the public! Find out more
here聟
At the roundabout, use the subway to emerge on the
right hand side of Smallbrook Queensway.
The pagoda on the roundabout was donated to Birmingham
by a businessman who owns Chinese supermarkets in the city. A very tall
new skyscraper is being built on Holloway Circus (behind the pagoda, see
the photograph, left). It will contain two hotels and flats. Beetham Tower
will be the city's tallest structure - from the top floor, you'll be able
to look down on the BT Tower!
Continue straight on up Smallbrook Queensway.
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