Harrow Road
Harrow Road is an ancient route in north west London which runs from Paddington in a northwesterly direction towards Harrow. It is also the name given to the immediate surrounding area of Queens Park and Kensal Green, straddling the NW10, W10, W2 and W9 postcodes. With minor deviations in the 19th and 20th centuries, the route remains otherwise unaltered.
Harrow Road is a ward of the City of Westminster. The population of this ward at the 2021 Census was 11,381.
Route
Before urbanisation the entire road was known as the "Harrow Road" but, as various local authorities came into existence and imposed independent numbering schemes and more localised descriptions on the parts of the road within their respective boundaries, the principal name was replaced in a number of places along its course. The current street names running from Paddington to Harrow are as follows:Starting at the junction of Harrow Road and Edgware Road at Paddington Green in the City of Westminster:
- Harrow Road, passing through Maida Hill, Queens Park and Kensal Green. This stretch runs partially alongside and underneath the Westway urban motorway.
- High Street, A404
- Craven Park, A404
- Hillside, A404
- Brentfield, A404
- Harrow Road, A404
- High Road, A404
- Harrow Road, A404, changing to A4005 at the junction with Watford Road
- Sudbury Hill, A4005
- London Road, A4005, changing to B457 at junction with Roxeth Hill
- High Street, B457
History
In the 20th century, many properties along Harrow Road were developed into high-rise social housing, though some 19th-century houses and commercial buildings north of the Paddington Basin were retained. These included Elgin Towers, constructed between 1966 and 1969, and demolished in 1994.
In popular culture
The 1950 film The Blue Lamp is set around Harrow Road and features it prominently.In one version of the Bus Driver's Prayer, the line from The Lord's Prayer, "Hallowed be thy name" is replaced with "Harrow Road be thy name."
In Sam Selvon's 1956 Lonely Londoners, the newly migrated Tanty lives in Harrow Road. The novel explores the clash of cultures, as she lives in this part of London "like how some people live in small village and never go to 'the city.'"
In the DJ_Khaled track "God Did" from August 2022, Jay-Z mentions Harrow Road in the line "And bloke and 'nem from London, Harrow Road, Weston Inn" which Jay-Z later discussed in a podcast with Asher D.