Soho Loop Explained

Soho Loop
Elev Ft:453
Status:Open
Navigation Authority:Canal and River Trust

The Soho Loop is a 2disp=flipNaNdisp=flip section of the eighteenth-century Old BCN Main Line canal in Birmingham, England, about 1.2miles west of the city centre, which opened to traffic on 6 November 1769, and was bypassed in September 1827 by a straight 0.75adj=onNaNadj=on section of the New BCN Main Line.[1] Much of the 45ha of enclosed land is occupied by the 20ha of Birmingham's City Hospital, and the canal itself serves private residential moorings at Hockley Port Basin via a 310yd branch extending north-eastwards. This is all that remains of the former Soho Branch that once served Matthew Boulton's Soho Manufactory. There is pedestrian access to a tow path for the entire length of the outside of the loop, which skirts the southern boundary of Winson Green Prison and twice passes underneath the Stour Valley Railway. The Centre of the Earth environmental education centre is adjacent to the canal and has a long wharf frontage.

See also

References

52.4925°N -1.9265°W

Notes and References

  1. Book: Hadfield, Charles. Canals of the West Midlands. David & Charles. Newton Abbott.