Feversham Girls' Academy
Feversham Girls' Academy (formerly Feversham College) is an Islamic secondary school and sixth form for girls located in the Undercliffe area of Bradford, in the English county of West Yorkshire. It was established in 1994 as a private school, before becoming a state-funded voluntary aided school in 2001, coordinating with Bradford City Council for admissions. The school converted to academy status in 2011. Feversham Girls' Academy offers GCSEs and Cambridge Nationals as programmes of study for pupils, while students in the sixth form have the option to study from a range of A-levels and BTECs. The school also has a specialism in science.
Nearby Places View Menu
460 m
Peel Park, Bradford
Peel Park is a 22.6-hectare (56-acre) urban public park in the Bolton and Undercliffe area of Bradford, England, located about 0.75 miles (1.2 km) north-east of the city centre, and named after Sir Robert Peel (1788–1850).
Peel Park was Bradford's first public park and is on the English Heritage and National Register of Historic Parks and Gardens online databases.
The park is a Green Flag Award winner and has been for a number of years.
509 m
Al-Mahdi Mosque, Bradford
The Al-Mahdi Mosque is a mosque in Bradford, England. The mosque was built at a cost £2.5 million entirely from voluntary donations of British Ahmadi Muslims. With a capacity of 2,000 worshippers, it is among the largest in the city.
611 m
Bradford power station
Bradford Power Station (also known as Valley Road Power Station) was an electricity generating site located on Valley Road in Bradford, West Yorkshire, England. The primary source of fuel was coal which was railed into the sidings adjacent to the Bradford Forster Square to Shipley railway line. The plant operated for 79 years and had cooling towers constructed from wood and was noted for its 300-foot (91 m) chimney that was supposed to vent smoke away from the valley floor in Bradford Dale that the power station was located on.
The commissioning of a power station in Bradford as operated by the Bradford Corporation, made it the first municipal supplier of electricity in the United Kingdom.
613 m
Conditioning House
The Conditioning House was a public institution in Bradford, Yorkshire, England, which provided independent quality control of wool. It was established by Bradford Corporation in 1887 and in its heyday assessed nearly 70% of the UK's wool, in particular its staple length and water content. It closed in the 1980s and stood empty for some 30 years until its conversion into offices and flats was completed in 2024.
English
Français