Place   

Olympic Way

Wembley Stadium, then known as the Empire Stadium, was opened in 1923. Anyone arriving at Wembley Park station to visit the Stadium had to first cross a road and some railway lines, and then negotiate the extensive buildings and gardens of the British Empire Exhibition. For part of the route there was a wide avenue called Kingsway. This 1935 map shows a pedestrian tunnel under the railway line. A 1946 aerial photograph does not show any clear continuous route.

Following WW2, with plans for the 1948 Olympics to be held at Wembley, a walkway was created, labour being partly provided by German prisoners of war. Its renaming as ‘Olympic Way’ was marked with a plaque at the Wembley Park station end.

But Olympic Way was created as a road, with match crowds having to make do with inadequate pavements.  The 1960 FA Cup Final crowds spilled out onto the road. The photo on this page is dated 1986.

Planning permission for the pedestrianisation of Olympic Way was granted in 1991 (so late). The scheme included widening the subway under Bridge Road and linking a new Olympic Square beside the station with the full-width pedestrian route to the stadium. It was opened as the Bobby Moore Bridge in September 1993.

In 2023 another plaque, at the Wembley Stadium end, was unveiled.

Football fans tend to call this route Wembley Way.

Sources: primarily Legacy Brent.

This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Olympic Way

Commemorated ati

Olympic Way - 1948 plaque

Unveiled in its new location on 19 April 2023, the same day that a plaque at ...

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Olympic Way - 2023 plaque

On the day this plaque was unveiled so was a restored plaque from 1948, at th...

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Other Subjects

Sir Joseph Paxton

Sir Joseph Paxton

Architect responsible for the Great Exhibition, 1851. Born Milton Bryan, Bedfordshire. The Crystal Palace Company gave him, free of rent, Rockhills, a Regency house to the north of the Crystal Pala...

Person, Architecture, Gardens / Agriculture

4 memorials
Market Gardens at Burgess Park

Market Gardens at Burgess Park

Our image is an extract from Stanfords 1862-71 map of London. Albany Road is the main road about a third of the way down; St George's Church is at the lower left; the present-day Chumleigh Gardens ...

Place, Food & Drink, Gardens / Agriculture

1 memorial
Joseph Beck

Joseph Beck

Saving Clissold Park have some lovely old photos of this man but they have eschewed the normal form of potted biography and instead have provided 13 bullets points:  Chairman of the Clissold Par...

Person, Gardens / Agriculture, Politics & Administration

2 memorials
Lancelot 'Capability' Brown

Lancelot 'Capability' Brown

Landscapte architect. Baptised in Northumberland. The 'Capability' came from his habit of declaring estates to have 'capability' for improvement, rather than being a description of his skills. Nowa...

Person, Gardens / Agriculture

1 memorial
New River Loop - restoration

New River Loop - restoration

London Gardens Trust says "In 1890 the portion of the New River around Enfield village was piped underground, thereby making this stretch redundant. It was saved from being filled in by a public ca...

Event, Gardens / Agriculture

1 memorial