51) Walthamstow Central Library  High Street E17 - Grade II
Designed by J.W.Dunford and erected 1907-9. Part funded by Andrew Carnegie, the Scottish born steel magnate and philanthropist from Pennsylvania.

52) Emmanuel Church Hall  Hitcham Road E10 - Grade II
A yellow brick and portland stone church hall erected in 1906 by Eustace Corrie Frere, which served as the Church until 1935.

53) The Granada Cinema  Hoe Street E17 - Grade II*
Erected in 1930, the former Walthamstow Granada was the first Granada built, designed and decorated by Massey and Komisjersky, and is in a Moorish style.

54) Clevelands  285 Hoe Street E17 - Grade II
A large much-altered detached house, dating probably from the 17th Century and named after a one time mistress of Charles II, Barbara Villiers, Duchess of Cleveland.

55) Chestnuts House 398 Hoe Street E17 - Grade II*
A substantial mid 18th Century detached house, formerly the home of wealthy merchants. Birthplace of Charles Green, Captain of Essex Cricket Club 1883-88.

56) Pair of forecourt piers  Chestnuts House, Hoe Street E17 - Grade II
18th Century piers to the original carriage drive of Chestnuts House.

57) Pimp Hall Barn  Kings Road E4 - now delisted.
Destroyed January 1990 in a gale.

58) Pimp Hall Dovecote  Kings Road E4 - Grade II
A 17th Century timber framed dovecote, the only surviving structure of the manor of Pimp Hall.

59) Langthorne Hospital  Langthorne Road E11 - Grade II
Erected in 1840 as the West Ham Union Workhouse on land originally part of Stratford Langthorne Abbey. Renamed in 1948.

60) Chapel to Langthorne Hospital Langthorne Road E11 - Grade II
Brick built Chapel to the former Workhouse.

61) Gate Lodge to Langthorne Hospital  Langthorne Road E11 - Grade II
Gatekeeper’s lodge to the Workhouse in matching style.

62) Fetter Lane Congregational Chapel Langthorne Road E11 - Grade II
An Arts and Crafts style Church by P Morley Horder in 1899. Interior in 17th Century style, recalling original Fetter Lane Chapel.

63) St. Edmund’s Church  Larkswood Road E4 - Grade II
A grey brick and knapped flint Church erected in 1938 by N.Cachemaille-Day in a simplified perpendicular Gothic style.

64) Bakers Almshouses  Lea Bridge Road Leyton E10 - Grade II
Designed by Thomas Edward Knightley in an Italianate style and built between 1857 and 1866 for the London Master Bakers Benevolent Institution.

65) Railings and Gates  Bakers Almshouses, Lea Bridge Road E10 - Grade II
Restored 19th Century ironwork contemporary with the Almshouses.

66) Parish Church of Emmanuel  251 Lea Bridge Road E10 - Grade II
A simple 1930’s Tudor style Church by M.Travers and T.F.W.Grant, erected with aid from local Masonic lodges.

67) Carnegie Library  Lea Bridge Road E10 - Grade II
A red brick and stone Library designed by W.Jacques and erected in 1905. Funded by Andrew Carnegie, the Scottish born steel magnate and philanthropist.

68) Church of St. Saviour Markhouse Road E17 - Grade II
Designed by T.F.Dolman and erected in 1874. The only surviving ‘Gothic revival’ church in Walthamstow.

69) All Saints Church  Old Church Road E4 - Grade II*
The original parish church of Chingford dating from Norman times. Replaced by the Church on the Green in 1844, and restored from dereliction in 1928 by the generosity of Louisa Heathcote of Friday Hill House.

70) The Old Town Hall  Orford Road E17 - Grade II
The first purpose built town hall of Walthamstow erected in 1866 in an Italianate style. Restored in 1994.

71) Orford House  Orford Road E17 - Grade II
An early 19th Century Regency villa, once the home of John Cass a prosperous Whitechapel merchant. The house and road take their name from Orford in Suffolk.

72) St. Michael and All Angels Church  Palmerston Road E17 - Grade II
The largest church in Walthamstow, erected in 1885 in Early English style to the design of James Maltby Bignall.

73) Pole Hill, Obelisk E4 - Grade II
An eight foot granite monolith erected in 1824 to mark the direction of the Greenwich meridian, which was changed in 1850 and now passes 19 feet to the east of the obelisk.

74) Clock House  13 Pretoria Avenue E17 - Grade II
A Regency style detached villa, erected in 1813 and the original Walthamstow home of the Warner family. Originally set in extensive landscaped grounds fronting Marsh Street (now High Street).

75) Queen Elizabeth’s Hunting Lodge  Rangers Road E4 - Grade II*
The ‘Greate Standinge’ commissioned by Henry VIII in 1543 from which the aristocracy would view the hunt across Fairmaid Bottom.

76) Butlers Retreat  Rangers Road E4 - Grade II
A 19th Century timber framed weatherboarded barn, converted in 1891 into a ‘Retreat’ serving teas and refreshments by the Butler family who ran it until 1971.

77) Church of St. Barnabas and St. James the Greater  St. Barnabas Road E17 - Grade II*
A fine example of Edwardian Church architecture, designed by William Douglas Caröe and erected in 1902.

78) St. Barnabas Rectory  St. Barnabas Road E17 - Grade II
A Queen Anne style red brick detached rectory by W.D.Caröe erected with the adjacent Church.

79) Walthamstow House  Shernhall Street E17 - Grade II*
A substantial mid 18th Century house, once the home of Sir Robert Wigram, whose sons lived at Thorpe Combe and Brookscroft.

80) Vestry House Museum  Vestry Road E17 - Grade II
Erected in 1730 for use as a workhouse and for Vestry meetings. Has also been a police station, armoury, builders yard, house, and since 1931 a local museum.

81) St. Barnabas Parish Hall  Wellesley Road E17 - Grade II
A red brick parish hall by W.D.Caröe, erected in 1902 as part of the St. Barnabas Church development.

82) Nos 133 and 135 Whipps Cross Road  E11 - Grade II
Two surviving properties from the original ‘Assembly Row’ of 12 middle class houses, constructed in 1767 on the edge of the forest.

83) No 143 Whipps Cross Road  E11 - Grade II
Another survivor from the ‘Assembly Row’ of 1767 with the front elevation now stuccoed.

84)  Nos 153, 155 and 157 Whipps Cross Road  E11 - Grade II
Three more survivors from the ‘Assembly Row’ of 1767.

85) Old Butcher’s Shop  Wood Street E17 - Grade II
A remarkable survival of an eighteenth century weatherboarded butchers shop.

86) Clock House  Wood Street E17 - Grade II
A substantial 18th Century house with a fine 19th Century covered balcony at the rear. Once the home of Sir Jacob Jacobson, a successful Dutch merchant.

87) St. Margaret’s  Woodford New Road - Grade II
A delightful much altered and extended property in spacious grounds, with elements of 18th, 19th and 20th Century work.

88) The High Stone  junction of New Wanstead and Hollybush Hill E11 - Grade II
A 19th Century portland stone obelisk on the stump of an earlier milestone. The ‘stone’ from which Leytonstone gets its name. Now transferred to Redbridge, as a result of boundary changes.

89, 90 and 91) K6 Telephone kiosks outside Bakers Almshouses  E10, adjacent to Carnegie Library E10, and outside the William Morris Gallery E17 - Grade II
Cast iron telephone kiosks designed by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott in 1935, and inspired by a tomb in St. Pancras Church graveyard.

92) Ice house at St. Joseph’s Roman Catholic School  Marsh Lane E10 - Grade II
A late 18th Century Ice house, originally in the grounds of Etloe House, designed to ensure fresh food throughout the year.

93) No 807 High Road Leyton E10 - Grade II
An early 18th Century house of a wealthy merchant, now much altered on the ground floor. A butcher’s shop until the early 20th Century.

94) Friday Hill House  Simmons Lane E4 - Grade II
The Victorian Manor house of Chingford Earls, designed by Lewis Vulliamy in 1839 for Robert Boothby Heathcote. Reused Jacobean panelling and chimney pieces survive internally.

95) Chingford Mill Pumping Station  Turbine House and railings, Lower Hall Lane E4 - Grade II
A delightful former pumping station complex, built 1890-95 for the East London Waterworks Co., designed by W.B.Bryan. Situated next to the Old Toll bridge.

96) Walthamstow Tramway Offices and Depot  Chingford Road E17 - Grade II
The offices of the former Walthamstow Urban District Council Tramways, in typically Edwardian red brick and terracotta.

97) Former Empress Cinema  468-474 Hoe Street - Grade II
An elaborate example of a small early 20th century “electric picture theatre” erected by Good Brothers, local builders, builders merchants and impresarios.

98) Church of Our Lady of Grace and St Teresa of Avila  Station Road E4 - Grade II
Catholic church in Gothic Revival style by architect/builder GW Martyn erected in 1931. Tower added in 1955. English Oak south porch with carvings by Don Potter.

99) Chingford United Reformed Church  Buxton Road E4 - Grade II
Originally Chingford Congregational Church designed by JD and SJ Mould and erected in 1910 to replace the adjacent James Spicer Memorial Hall of 1890.

100) Former Essex County Cricket Club Pavillion  High Road Leyton E10 - Grade II
Designed by Richard CREED FRIBA and erected in 1886 for the Essex County Cricket Club. It remained the official club headquarters until 1934.

101) Low Hall Pump House  Low Hall Lane E17 - Grade II
Victorian Sewerage Pumping Station built by Walthamstow Urban District Council with surviving Marshall C Type steam engines.

102). Church of St Margaret of Antioch & attached railings - Woodhouse Road E11 - Grade II
A late Gothic Revival church by J.T.Newman and William Jacques erected in 1892.  Contemporary cast iron gates and railing by Bayliss, Jones & Bayliss Ltd.

103). Church Hall / Parish Institute to the Church of St Margaret of Antioch - Woodhouse Road E11 - Grade II
Designed by J.G.Lidiard James FRIBA and erected in 1910 as a permanent replacement for the original parish rooms destroyed by fire in 1908

104)  Church of St Andrew, Colworth Road E11 - Grade II
Early English style church by Sir Arthur Blomfield erected on part of the Wallwood Estate donated by Sir Henry Cotton. East end 1887, west end 1893

105) Lighthouse Methodist Church, 102 Markhouse Road E17 - Grade II
Erected in 1893 and for many years the best attended Methodist Church in Walthamstow. The whimsical Lighthouse turret reflects the nautical connections of it's founder, Captain King of the Bullard Line of steamers.

106) Walthamstow Greyhound Stadium, entrance range with tote board and kennels, Chingford Road E4 - Grade II
Iconic art deco style greyhound stadium erected in 1931 on the site of Walthamstow Grange football club. The best surviving and most architecturally interesting vintage greyhound stadium in the country.