'Vauxhall' is an inner city area of
South London in the
London Borough of Lambeth.
It has also given its name to the
Vauxhall Parliamentary Constituency, which also includes large swathes of
Brixton and
Clapham
Since
1998, the geographical confusion has increased as Vauxhall is now part of the borough's
North Lambeth town centre, for administrative purposes.
History
There is no mention of Vauxhall in the 1086
Domesday Book. The area formed part of the extensive Manor of
South Lambeth. From various accounts, three local roads – the
South Lambeth Road, Clapham Road (previously Merton Road) and Wandsworth Road (previously Kingston Road) – were ancient and well-known routes to and from London.
The land was flat and marshy with parts poorly drained by ditches, and only started to be developed in the mid
18th century. Prior to this it provided market garden produce for the nearby
City of London.
It is generally accepted that the
etymology of Vauxhall is from the name of
Faulke de Breaute, the head of King
John's mercenaries, who owned a large house in the area which was referred to as Faulke's Hall, later Foxhall, and eventually Vauxhall.
The area only became generally known by this name when the
Vauxhall Pleasure Gardens opened as a public attraction. Initially most visitors would have approached by river, but crowds of Londoners of all classes came to know the area after the construction of
Westminster Bridge in the 1740s.
Vauxhall, Russian railway stations and Pushkin
There are competing theories as to why the
Russian word for a major railway station is (''vokzal''), which coincides with the canonical
19th century transliteration of "Vauxhall".
It has long been suggested that a Russian delegation visited the area to inspect the construction of the
London and South Western Railway in 1840, and mistook the name for a generic title of the building type. This was further embellished into a story that the Tsar
Nicholas I of Russia, visiting London in
1844, was taken to see the trains at Vauxhall and made the same mistake. However, the L&SWR's original railway terminus and the associated railway yards were always better known as
Nine Elms.
A more likely explanation is that the first Russian railway, constructed in
1837, ran from
Saint Petersburg via
Tsarskoye Selo to
Pavlovsk, where extensive
Pleasure Gardens had earlier been established.
In
1838 a music and entertainment pavilion was constructed at the railway terminus. This pavilion was called the ''Vokzal'' in homage to the Vauxhall Pleasure Gardens in London. The name soon came to be applied to the station itself, which was the gateway that most visitors used to enter the gardens. It later came to mean any substantial railway station building (a different Russian word, ''stantsiya'', is used for minor stations).
The word "voksal" (воксал) had been known in Russian language in the meaning of "amusement park" long before the 1840s and may be found, e.g., in the poetry of
Aleksandr Pushkin: На гуляньях иль в воксалах / Легким зефиром летал (''To Natalie'' (1813): "At
fêtes and in ''voksals'', /I've been flitting like a gentle
Zephyrus" [
here "Zephyrus" is an allegory of a gentle, warm and pleasant wind ]) According to
Vasmer, the word is first attested in the ''
Saint Petersburg Vedomosti'' for 1777 in the form фоксал, which may reflect an earlier English spelling, Faukeshall.
Englishman
Michael Maddox established a Vauxhall Gardens in the Moscow suburbs in 1783, with pleasure gardens, a small theatre/concert hall and places for refreshment. Archdeacon William Coxe describes the place as a 'sort of Vauxhall' in that year, in his 'Travels into Russia' .
Today
Though now a major transport hub within minutes of central London, Vauxhall was neglected for many years. Many of its streets were destroyed during German bombing in
World War II or ravaged through poor city planning. To many Londoners, Vauxhall is merely a bleak place of transit.
Much of the area in Vauxhall contains light industry, offices and government buildings. Many companies and organisations were attracted in the past by Vauxhall's central location and comparatively cheap rent compared to
Westminster on the other side of the river. In recent years, Vauxhall's riverside has undergone major redevelopment with the construction of a number of modern residential and office blocks, most notably the distinctive
MI6 building at Vauxhall Cross.
Housing and population
Many Vauxhall residents live in
social housing. There are several
gentrified areas, and smart roads of terraced townhouses on streets such as Fentiman Road and Heyford Avenue are well known as desirable locations. Vauxhall is also a popular residential area for
Members of Parliament and
civil servants due to its proximity to the
Houses of Parliament and
Whitehall -- Kennington is within the area wired for the Commons'
Division Bell. Some
18th and 19th century property also survives — most famously
Bonnington Square, a community which emerged from the 1970s/1980s
squat scene in London, and remains as mostly housing co-operatives today.
There is a significant Portuguese community; many Portuguese restaurants and bars are located in South Lambeth Road and the surrounding area.
The late 1990s/early 2000s explosion in London property prices has led to a boom in riverside construction and property re-developments, such as the large St George Wharf development by
Vauxhall Bridge. Residents include John Major, Chelsea Clinton, Dan MacMillan.
The impact of new construction and the rise in land values has created a dramatic change in Vauxhall's demographics.
Noted residents
Owing to its position close to the Houses of Parliament, many famous politicians have their London homes in the Vauxhall/Kennington area. Famous residents include:
★
Kenneth Clarke
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Geoff Hoon
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Ed Balls
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Yvette Cooper
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Alistair Darling
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Jack Straw
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Charles Kennedy
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John Major
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Chelsea Clinton
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Dan MacMillan
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Lee Ryan
Community facilities
Vauxhall Park
[1] contains an area of miniature model houses (also in
Fitzroy Gardens, Melbourne) as well as tennis courts, one o'clock club and children's playground. It is open daily for recreation and has an "open day" once a year.
St Peter's Church in Kennington Lane
[2] was designed by
John Loughborough Pearson who was also the architect of the Rochester, Bristol, Peterborough, Lincoln, Truro (Cornwall) and Brisbane (Australia) Cathedrals. Today the church is a community centre and arts venue as well as a church. Next to the St Peter's is ''Vauxhall City Farm''.
Vauxhall Cross
Vauxhall Cross dominates the Vauxhall riverside. It is immediately to the south-east of
Vauxhall Bridge where six major roads converge, including the
Albert Embankment which exits the Cross to the north, and which is the southernmost point of entry into the
London congestion charge area.
Vauxhall Cross is the site of the central
headquarters of the
British Secret Intelligence Service (more commonly referred to as MI6), which occupies offices built between 1989 and 1992 and commonly referred to as Vauxhall Cross. More recently, a large complex of apartments and offices has been built to the south of Vauxhall Bridge.
The
James Bond film ''
Die Another Day'' featured the fictional
London Underground station of
Vauxhall Cross, a closed station on the
Piccadilly Line and now employed by MI6 as an extension to its HQ.

The Vauxhall Cross transport interchange. The solar panels supply energy for 60% of the bus station's lighting. (October 2005)
In fact, the Piccadilly Line does not go south of the river at all; only the
Victoria Line passes anywhere nearby, and the secret entrance to the station shown as on the east side of Westminster Bridge is not accurate either.
Vauxhall Cross was described as "one of the most unpleasant road junctions in South London", in
Nikolaus Pevsner's architectural guide to London. Through 2002 to 2004 the Cross underwent a gradual redesign to accommodate a bus interchange linked to the
Vauxhall mainline railway and tube stations, both of which are located to the south-eastern end of the cross. Work has involved design changes to traffic lanes, improved pedestrian and cycle crossings, refurbishment of walkways beneath the mainline railway viaduct, and the construction of a bus station, completed in December 2004 featuring an undulating steel-frame canopy and ribbed steel walls. An interesting feature of the canopy is a series of photoelectric cells generating electricity to offset the energy used by the bus station.
Gay Village

The Royal Vauxhall Tavern a well-known gay venue
Vauxhall is home to an ever-increasing number of gay bars and nightclubs, such as Factory, Crash, Area, Orange (Fire), Megawoof, Barcode, The Hoist, South Central and the Royal Vauxhall Tavern, as well as other venues often holding special events for gay clubbers, such as Hidden, Club Colosseum and Renaissance Rooms. The aforementioned Royal Vauxhall Tavern dates back to at least the late 1800s, and was for many years a traditional English music hall and cabaret venue. In recent years the building has come under constant threat of buyout and demolition from property developers, as it stands alone on a prime piece of grassland adjacent to Vauxhall railway station. However, the pub was bought in 2004 by sympathetic owners who have announced, "business as usual".
Vauxhall was originally the home of the more underground gay clubs with the arrival of Crash in the 1990s. Over the years, more clubs and gay businesses have followed Crash's lead by opening up in the railway arches underneath the main line out of
Waterloo Station. The burgeoning club scene and the lure of the more trendy railway arches have made Vauxhall a prime destination for businesses to open up in, including London's only exclusively gay gym (Paris Gym), another branch of Chariots (gay sauna) and Barcode (sister bar venue of the same name in
Soho). Another Soho based gay bar, Village Soho, has announced that it also intends to open a Vauxhall venue sometime in late 2007. The area is fast earning the nickname "Vauxhall
Gay Village".
Vauxhall has also become colloquially known as "Voho" (a consolidation of the names Vauxhall and Soho) within the gay community, due to the emergence of Vauxhall as a gay village after Soho, London's other main gay village in
Westminster.
British musician
Morrissey titled one of his album releases
Vauxhall and I. It is thought this is a reference to Jonny Rogan, the author of an unauthorised biography on Morrissey ''The Severed Alliance'', who at the time lived in Vauxhall. It is also a reference to the film ''
Withnail and I''.
Transport and locale
Nearest places
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Battersea
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Nine Elms
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Kennington
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Oval
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Pimlico
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Stockwell
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Camberwell
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Walworth
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Newington
Nearest tube stations
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Vauxhall
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Kennington
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Oval
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Pimlico
See also
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Afterhours clubs
References
★ ''Vauxhall Pleasures''. Published November 2006 in
hidden europe magazine Issue 11, pp. 30-34. ISSN 1860-6318. (Article explores the pleasure gardens and Vauxhall's Russian connections)
★ ''Vauxhall Gardens Revisit'd''
Michael Carter (Short essay which, like the preceding reference, provides useful further reading on this topic)
External links
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The Vauxhall Society
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Vauxhall, Kennington and the Oval — community website
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Vauxhall Gardens 1661–1859 — history of the Pleasure Gardens including lists of performers, etc.
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Vauxhall Bus Terminal — a critique
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blitzandblight.com — St George Wharf
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Vauxhall gay scene information