Malone Park
Malone Park is a private avenue in Belfast, Northern Ireland.
Malone Park is a private avenue in Belfast, Northern Ireland.
Malmesbury Victoria F.C. are a football club based in Malmesbury, England and playing in the Wiltshire Prem League at the Flying Monk Ground.
The Malmaison Hotel Liverpool, England is an iconic eleven storey building located alongside Princes Dock in the city centre. Part of the luxury hotel chain Malmaison, the Liverpool hotel is the chain's first purpose built location.
Maldon and East Chelmsford was a parliamentary constituency represented in the House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom.
Maison Dieu ('House of God') is a hospital, monastery, hostel, retirement home and Royal lodge commissioned by Henry III in 1234. The timber framed building is located beside what is now the A2 road in Faversham, Kent.
Main Street railway station, Gorbals, Glasgow, Scotland, was built by the City of Glasgow Union Railway while the new line from Shields Junction to St Enoch station was being developed in the 1870s. It was situated adjacent to Gorbals station, which…
The Maidenhead Waterways are a system of waterways in Maidenhead, England.
Maida Hill Tunnel is a canal tunnel on the Regent's Canal in London.
Maggieknockater (Magh an Fhucadair in Scottish Gaelic) is a hamlet on the A95 road between Craigellachie and Mulben in Scotland in the Moray council area, in the former county of Banffshire.
Magdalene Street is a street in the north of central Cambridge, England.
Magdalene House is the preparatory school for Wisbech Grammar School which enrolls boys and girls from reception to year six.
Maesgeirchen is a large housing estate on the edge of the city of Bangor in Gwynedd, north-west Wales, with roughly 4,000 inhabitants.
Maenan is a rural settlement in Conwy, Wales, located approximately 4 miles to the north of Llanrwst and 3 miles to the south of the village of Eglwysbach. The population of the area is approximately 300 people, and more than 75% of the population a…
Maelienydd, sometimes spelt Maeliennydd, was a cantref and lordship in east central Wales covering the area from the River Teme to Radnor Forest and the area around Llandrindod Wells. The area, which is mainly upland, is now in Powys. During the Mid…
Madeley Old Hall is a historical 16th-century house, now a small hotel, in the village of Madeley in Staffordshire, England.
Madden or Maddan (possibly from Irish: na Madain) is a small village and townland in County Armagh, Northern Ireland. It is within the Armagh City and District Council area. It had a population of 77 people (31 households) in the 2011 Census.
Mackworth Castle was a 14th- or 15th-century structure located in Derbyshire, at the upper end of Mackworth village near Derby. The home for several centuries of the Mackworth family, it was at some point reduced to the ruins of a gatehouse suggesti…
Macken or Mackan (from Irish: Meacan) is a small hamlet and townland in County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland, off the A509 main Enniskillen to Derrylin road.
Machrie (Scottish Gaelic: Am Machaire) is a village on the Isle of Arran in the Firth of Clyde, Scotland. Machrie Bay can be found on the West Coast. The village is within the parish of Kilmory.
Macclesfield College is a further learning institute in Macclesfield, Cheshire which primarily offers BTEC and NVQ qualifications, this college is noted within the local area as an aerospace engineering college as it possesses a small plane for its …
MacIntyre School is a mixed Independent school for children with extreme special needs and severe learning difficulties. It is situated in the village of Wingrave near Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire.
Mabgate is an inner city area of Leeds, West Yorkshire, England, and the name of one of the streets in it. "The area is bounded to the west by North Street; to the east by Macaulay Street; to the north by Mushroom Street and to the south by the New …
The Lyne Water is a tributary of the River Tweed which rises in the Pentland Hills of southern Scotland at Baddinsgill Reservoir. It runs through West Linton and Romannobridge, passes Flemington and Lyne Station and enters the Tweed west of Peebles.…
Lyndon is a district within the Metropolitan Borough of Solihull in the English county of the West Midlands. It was the home of the Lyndon family. The home (Lyndon Manor) is long gone but became Lyndon Park on Lyndon Rd. It was born in Acocks Green …
Lymm railway station was a station to the west of Whitbarrow Road, Lymm, England on the Warrington and Stockport Railway. It opened on 1 November 1853; and it closed to passengers on 10 September 1962. The railway was absorbed by the LNWR.
Lymm Dam is the name of a lake in Lymm, Cheshire, England, situated in the greenbelt buffer between the nearby towns of Warrington and Altrincham. It was created in 1824 by a dam built during the construction of what is now the A56 road, when local …
Lymm Cross is in the village of Lymm, Cheshire, England.
Lymington New Forest Hospital is a community hospital in Lymington, Hampshire, designed by Murphy Philipps Architects.
Lyme Regis railway station was the terminus of the Lyme Regis branch line in the west of the English county of Dorset. Serving the coastal resort town of Lyme Regis, it was sited high above the town centre as a result of the hilly nature of the loca…
Lydgate is a small village in the Saddleworth parish of the Metropolitan Borough of Oldham, in Greater Manchester, England.
Lydford railway station was a junction at Lydford between the Great Western Railway (GWR) and London and South Western Railway (LSWR) situated in a remote part of north-west Dartmoor in Devon, England.
The Luxulyan Valley (Cornish: Glynn Gwernan, meaning alder tree valley) is the steep sided and thickly wooded valley of the River Par, situated in the south east of Cornwall, England, UK.
Lutterworth was a station on the Great Central Railway, the last main line to be constructed from the north of England to London, which opened in 1899 to serve the small Leicestershire town of Lutterworth.
Dallow Lane was a football ground in Luton, England.
Luton Bute Street railway station was the first to be built in Luton. It was opened by the Luton, Dunstable and Welwyn Junction Railway Company in 1858, which was an extension of the Welwyn and Hertford Railway.
Lusty Beg Island (from Irish Lóiste Beag, meaning "little lodge") is an island located in Lower Lough Erne, in County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland. In the early 20th century, Lady Hunt from Alberta in Canada owned Lustymore Island and Lusty Beg Islan…