Park End Street

In 1885 Park End Wharf was redeveloped as the site of the Tower Brewery,[5] which its owner F. Phillips then expanded in the 1890s and 1900s to designs by local architect H.J.

[5] Weaving's successor F. Phillips continued to expand the business, including the addition of a new tower brewhouse, chimney and other buildings in 1885 designed by H.J.

The station was dismantled and moved to Buckinghamshire Railway Centre in 1999 to make way for the creation of Frideswide Square and building of Saïd Business School.

[8] Behind its decorative gabled red brick facade, Cantay Depositories has a steel frame and iron columns cast by William Lucy's[8] Eagle Ironworks in Jericho, Oxford.

As a warehouse the building had 3,840 square feet (357 m2) of storage space and was segregated into sections by armoured, fire-proof doors that would close automatically in the event of fire.

From 1903 until after the Second World War Frank Cooper's Oxford Marmalade was made at a factory at 27 Park End Street[8] (now part of Frideswide Square) next to Victoria Buildings.

[11] "The Jam Factory" also housed Guardian Award-winning[citation needed] charity, "My Life My Choice" run by and for people with learning disabilities.

[13] In 1934 King's had larger premises built at 15 Park End Street[13] with showroom space for 500 motorcycles.

[14] The 1934 showroom is a two-storey Art Deco building whose facade is of yellow Bath Stone ashlar to match the Royal Oxford Hotel next door.

View looking east down Park End Street with Nuffield College and its spire in the distance.
Car park to the north of the eastern end of Park End Street. This area used to be the basin at the end of the Oxford Canal .
View south from the bridge on Park End Street of the Castle Mill Stream , a branch of the River Thames .