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Montpelier, Bristol

Inner suburb of Bristol

Montpelier, Bristol

Inner suburb of Bristol

FieldValue
countryEngland
official_nameMontpelier
coordinates
map_typeBristol
unitary_englandBristol
lieutenancy_englandBristol
regionSouth West England
constituency_westminsterBristol Central
post_townBRISTOL
postcode_districtBS6
postcode_areaBS
dial_code0117
os_grid_referenceST594743
static_imagePicton Street.jpg
static_image_captionA view along Picton Street
'The Arches' railway bridge is a local landmark on the borders of Montpelier, St Andrews and Cotham.

Montpelier is an inner suburban neighbourhood and conservation area in Bristol, England. It is located 1 mile north of The Centre in the Ashley electoral ward and Bristol Central parliamentary constituency. The area is served by Montpelier railway station on the Severn Beach Line railway.

Montpelier occupies a hillside which rises from south to north, overlooking the city centre, with narrow streets that follow the contours. It is densely built with primarily Georgian and Victorian terraced housing, with some modern infill apartment buildings and larger villas.

Montpelier has a reputation as a diverse and bohemian neighbourhood. Its main commercial area, Picton Street, is known for organic and vegetarian cuisine.

Location and boundaries

Montpelier is an informally defined neighbourhood, and modern usage can overlap with the neighbouring areas of St Paul's to the south, St Werburgh's to the east, St Andrew's to the north, and Cotham to the west. Historically, Montpelier was defined by the parish of St Andrew, created in 1845. For planning purposes, Bristol City Council define a Montpelier Conservation Area, which is roughly bounded by Ashley Road in the south, Ashley Hill in the east, the Severn Beach Line railway in the north, and Cheltenham Road to the west, corresponding loosely to the southern part of the old St Andrew's parish. For statistical purposes, the council uses slightly different boundaries, defining two Office for National Statistics output areas as Lower Montpelier (to the southeast) and Upper Montpelier (to the northeast).

History

The area now occupied by Montpelier was part of the Ashley estate from the early 12th century, and remained rural until the 18th century. Thomas Rennison built a fashionable lido here in the middle of the 18th century, and in 1786 Ashley Road was improved as a turnpike, with housing soon following alongside. Piecemeal building of individual villas and terraces of housing continued over the following decades, until its density increased rapidly with lower-middle class housing during the surge in Bristol's population in 1860s-70s.

[[Carr's disintegrator

Thomas Carr, an engineer of Montpelier, invented the Carr's disintegrator in 1859. It was the best-known disintegrator of its era.

Many of Montpelier's streets are named after famous generals or have military connotations, such as Wellington, York and Banner Roads, reflecting the popular patriotism of the age when they were laid out, in the wake of the Battle of Waterloo.

The area suffered from property blight during the 1960s, when it was threatened by proposals for a major ring road system, which would intersect with the M32 motorway at junction 3. Part of this plan was realised in Easton to the southeast, in the form of Easton Way, but public backlash led to a change in policy and it was not continued west of the motorway.

References

References

  1. (October 2008). "Montpelier Character Appraisal".
  2. (2004). "Montpelier: a Bristol suburb". Phillimore.
  3. "Ashley Ward Profile".
  4. "Records of the Anglican parish of St Andrew, Montpelier".
  5. "Deprivation Deciles 2019 and 2015 LSOA11 lookup".
  6. (10 October 2023). "Thomas Rennison and his Grand Pleasure Bath".
  7. (1909). "The Dressing of Minerals". Longmans, Green & Company.
  8. (1903). "The Elements of Mining and Quarrying". C. Griffin, limited.
  9. (1901). "A Text-book of Ore and Stone Mining". C. Griffin, limited.
  10. (11 November 2020). "COULD PICTON BE NEXT TO GET HIS HISTORICAL COMEUPPANCE". Bristol 24/7.
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This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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