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BOW Bowater Inc

24.18
0.00 (0.00%)
17 Apr 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Type Share ISIN Share Description
Bowater Inc LSE:BOW London Ordinary Share COM STK US$1
  Price Change % Change Share Price Shares Traded Last Trade
  0.00 0.00% 24.18 0.00 01:00:00
Bid Price Offer Price High Price Low Price Open Price
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
  -
Last Trade Time Trade Type Trade Size Trade Price Currency
- O 0 24.18 USD

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Date Time Title Posts
10/6/201415:19Malcolm Graham-Wood on Bowleven-
07/7/200520:06The Bow Back Rivers, East London70
26/10/200414:19Back Bow River System, London3
30/7/200410:56All BOW down to the truly great NEO1

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Posted at 06/7/2005 19:01 by energyi
The Olympics will help property prices in the East London area.

It will be good for those who live there (and have invested there), because there
will be huge sums spent on infrastructure. Personally, I am happy about that,
because the East End/ Bow area is a fascinating area for urban regeneration

Paradoxically, it may HURT property prices in the rest of London,
because the Docklands/ Straford are will be able to "rob" some of the higher
paying tenants and property buyers from the rest of London
Posted at 25/12/2004 10:35 by energyi
Nothing much happening in BOW, it would seem.
Check out the all-new Shepherd's BUSH thread:
Posted at 17/7/2004 18:24 by energyi
The figures I was given:

Unit Floor ... Price- View---- Type
---- Tower Bldg
1.3. First 2BR £ 285K Canal/Pk Res. 843sf
1.2. " " " 2BR Reserv MainRoad R... 801
1.1. " " " 2BR £ 250K PalmerRd R... 735
2.6. 2nd-- 2BR Reserv Canal/Pk Res
2.5. " " " 2BR Reserv MainRoad R
2.4. " " " 2BR Reserv PalmerRd R
3.9. 3rd-- 2BR £ 295K Canal/Pk Res.
3.8. " " " 2BR Reserv MainRoad R...
3.7. " " " 2BR Reserv PalmerRd R...
4.12 4th-- 2BR Reserv Canal/Pk Res
4.11 " " " 2BR £ 278K MainRoad R
4.10 " " " 2BR £ 275K PalmerRd R
5.15 5th-- 2BR Reserv Canal/Pk Res
5.14 " " " 2BR £ 283K MainRoad R
5.13 " " " 2BR £ 280K PalmerRd R
6.18 6th-- 2BR Reserv Canal/Pk Res
6.17 " " " 2BR £ 288K MainRoad R
6.16 " " " 2BR £ 285K PalmerRd R
7.21 7th-- 2BR Reserv Canal/Pk Res
7.20 " " " 2BR £ 293K MainRoad R
7.19 " " " 2BR £ 295K PalmerRd R
8.23 8th-- 2BR £ 298K Park.... Res. 801sf (£372/sf)
8.22 " " " 2BR £ 299K City/CWh R... 735sf (£407/sf)
9.25 9th-- 2BR Reserv Park.... Res 1046sf (£ ??)
9.26 " " " 2BR £ 399K City/CWh R... 950sf (£420/sf)
1028 10/11 3+S £ 650K City/CWh R.. 1435sf (£452/sf)
1027 10th- 2BR £ 399K Canal/Pk R... 884sf (£451/sf)
---- Canal Bldg
M1.. M/1st 3BR £ 450K Canal/Pk Res 1401sf (£320/sf)
M3.. " " " 1rm £ 290K Canal/Pk LvWk 940sf (£309/sf)
M5.. " " " 2rm £ 290K Canal/Pk LvWk 940sf (£309/sf)
M7.. " " " 3rm Reserv Canal/Pk LvWk 940sf
M9.. " " " 3rm £ 290K Canal/Pk LvWk 940sf -etc.on M/1
2.20 2nd/3 3BR Reserv Canal/Pk Res 1402sf
2.22 " " " 3rm £ 295K Canal/Pk LvWk 940sf
2.23 " " " 3rm £ 295K Canal/Pk LvWk 940sf -etc.on 2/3
4.37 4th-- 2BR Reserv Canal/Pk Res. 668sf
5.49 5th/6 2BR Reserv Canal/Pk Res. 885sf
5.55 5th/6 2BR £ 330K Canal/Pk Res. 885sf (£373/sf)

1.18 1st/2 3rm £ 300K PalmerRd LvW 1127sf (£266/sf)

-----
Notes:
£1000 to reserve. 10% Deposit on Exchange
Ground rent: £250 p.a.
They could NOT GIVE: Exact Service chg. (£760-2400)
Posted at 24/3/2004 08:51 by energyi
From Listings... this it?
View:

The Gatehouse, Albany Gunmakers Lane, Bow E3, Bow, London E3
A fantastic large two bedroom/two bathroom ground floor apartment in this Brand new development. The property is fully furnished at a high standard, and has a large terrace, which looks upon the Hertford Canal and Victoria park

(Price: £320 per week)
Posted at 23/3/2004 18:54 by energyi
BOW QUARTER? Is this what you mean?


Bow Quarter sits to the East next to the A102, and is taken up mostly by the mammoth Bryant & May match factory, now transformed into a huge complex of 700+ flats (many are rented) with swimming pools, bars and all the trimmings. It's an extremely well executed conversion, and has given the immediate area something of lift. The lanes of red brick terraces leading south to Grove Hall Park have been embraced into the larger Bow Quarter community and have seen their property stock rise considerably.
...
Many of the developments (especially Bow Quarter) have a mini village of facilities of their own, but Bow's main streets carry a good range of shops. A Tesco across the River Lea provides supermarket shopping. The gentrification of the area is well illustrated by the wine bars popping up on Bow Wharf, where Jongleurs have established a comedy club. It's not all change though: you'll still find pie and mash being served up on Roman Road during market days. Roman Road is famed for its end of line fashion goodies, and there are also bargains to be picked up at the factory wholesalers along Fairfield Road.

...MORE:
Posted at 19/2/2004 16:26 by energyi
BOW & Newham Area... More & More Property Development


Bow Central :
The Angelis :
Capital East:
Horizon.....:


BOW CENTRAL : Ordell Road, Bow, London, E3
First Phase launching soon.
Bow Central is a development of 1 and 2 bedroom apartments and 3 and 4 bedroom townhouses. Located in increasingly popular Bow, the development has good road, underground, DLR and bus links into the City and Docklands.

The development is to be set within a gated community and most of the properties within it will have a terrace, balcony or garden. Off-street parking will also be available.

- - - - -

THE ANGELIS
This stylish Islington development of one and two bed, two bath apartments, plus one amazing 2508 sq.ft. penthouse, with its own private roof terrace - will benefit from an air-conditioned gymnasium, movie/screening room, with two residents' roof terraces, gated underground parking, 24 hour security including a daytime concierge, and delightful park and water views of the City Canal Basin opposite. Completion Autumn 2004.


= = = = =
WHY THE HOMES RUSH?
Despite the 22,000 new waterside homes built during Docklands regeneration, demand currently exceeds supply with move-in dates on some developments stretching into next year.

Housebuilders are selling 40 percent of their offerings "off plan" with completions a year or more away. In that period, apartments can change hands two or three times as the pent-up demand fuels large increases in property values and profit for early buyers.

Half the residential sales serve the buoyant rentals market where returns, coupled with capital increases, produce good returns for buy for rent investors. The area is attracting wealthy British and overseas residents due to the unique 55 miles of waterside, relocation of banking and media giants, and the excellent transport links to the rest of London and Europe.

@:
Posted at 15/2/2004 20:22 by energyi
Guidebook: London E3
27 Nov 2000

This week I nominate... Bow. And why not? With plenty of period properties, new apartments and acres of green space and coupled with millions of pounds of inward investment...

This area is emerging as one of the East End's most attractive residential options. With £33.5million of lottery cash finding its way to Mile End Park and regeneration schemes further advanced than in neighbouring districts, things are definitely on the way up.

In truth, Bow has long offered a slightly smarter version of East End life. The proximity of Victoria Park and the de-industrialisation of the canal brought an inevitable desirability. The slums, home to Sylvia Pankhurst's suffragette movement, were soon reduced to pockets of deprivation and then cleared away: Rachel Whiteread's infamous cast of a Bow house took one of the last remaining slum dwellings as its mould. Conservation areas, including Victoria Park, and the delightful Tredegar Square, house impressive period properties, flat conversions are ubiquitous, and apartments along the Limehouse Cut even bring in a little Docklands styling to the region.

Despite the conservation orders, property in Bow is a perfect example of the mixed urban bag, with commercial and residential areas overlapping and the various rungs of the housing ladder refusing to sit in neat geographical demarcations. This cosmopolitanism serves the area well, as all residents have a vested interest in developing the place as a whole rather than promoting enclaves of prosperity.

On the north border of E3 is Victoria Park. For the best views and priciest properties you'll have to take a step into E9, where imposing Victorian houses line Cadogen Terrace. South of the park there's a lot of housing association activity, with smart new developments and affordable flats and houses. The rejuvenated Bow Wharf carries swish apartments whilst towards Grove Road, Chisenhale and Old Ford Roads offer attractive three storey Victorian properties happily backing onto the Hertford Union Canal. Chisenhale Road is also home to one of London's most innovative art galleries.

Smaller Victorian terraces and conversions fill the roads south to the railway line. The school conversion at School Bell Mews started something of a trend in the area, by annexing workspace galleries onto the flats. Below the railway line, blue period lampposts announce your arrival in Tredegar. Tredegar Square, with its brick and white stucco Georgiana, is the gem of region. Many houses have over 5 bedrooms, and are probably the most expensive in this part of the Capital. Newer properties in streets surrounding the square have plagiarised the style with reasonable success.

Bow Quarter sits to the East next to the A102, and is taken up mostly by the mammoth Bryant & May match factory, now transformed into a huge complex of 700+ flats (many are rented) with swimming pools, bars and all the trimmings. It's an extremely well executed conversion, and has given the immediate area something of lift. The lanes of red brick terraces leading south to Grove Hall Park have been embraced into the larger Bow Quarter community and have seen their property stock rise considerably.

The area south of Bow Church provides some of the cheapest deals in the district, mainly ex-council houses and flats. It's not the prettiest patch, but renovation of the Coventry Cross council estate here bodes well for the area as a whole. Conversions of Victorian terraces across the area are attracting investment buyers. The best properties are near the DLR, around Tomlins Grove, and in some of the new Riverside developments sitting by the River Lea and Limehouse Cut.

Many of the developments (especially Bow Quarter) have a mini village of facilities of their own, but Bow's main streets carry a good range of shops. A Tesco across the River Lea provides supermarket shopping. The gentrification of the area is well illustrated by the wine bars popping up on Bow Wharf, where Jongleurs have established a comedy club. It's not all change though: you'll still find pie and mash being served up on Roman Road during market days. Roman Road is famed for its end of line fashion goodies, and there are also bargains to be picked up at the factory wholesalers along Fairfield Road.

Surrounding parkland is probably Bow's greatest boon. The vast expanse of Victoria Park has long been one of London's favourite spots, and the cash injection for Mile End Park will give this inner city region two green borders, together with extensive recreational facilities. Towpaths along the canal and River Lea offer pleasant strolling and angling possibilities, whilst the more energetic are catered for with leisure centre resources on Three Mills Lane.

The deserted distilleries at Three Mills are now home to film studios (not to mention the malevolent spirit of Nasty Nick). There are only two mills on Three Mills Island, and they offer public displays of the area's industrial past. More glimpses of East End history can be found in the Raggedy School Museum, which attempts to bring Dr Barnardo's early projects with street children to life.

Train connections are pretty good, with tube stations at Mile End (Central, District, Hammersmith & City, Bromley by Bow and Bow Road (District Hammersmith & City), and DLR stops at Bow Church and Devons Road. Bow escapes the worst of the City's congestion, with Bow Road leading the A11 out towards the M25. The noisy East Cross Route stretch of motorway runs quite close to some of E3's easterly properties.

@:
Posted at 12/2/2004 00:16 by energyi
Three Mills ... Bow Back Rivers

A fascinating area of East London located in the southern section of the intricate Bow Back Rivers network of lower River Lee tidal channels. Three Mills has been an industrial area since the 11thC.

Gunpowder and corn were milled here in the 16thC, latterly grain for gin distilling. Today there is a visitor centre and several of the most elegant waterside buildings anywhere in London. The most important is House Mill (1776). It is Britain's oldest standing mill - and there has been a mill of some description on the site since before the time of the Doomsday Book. It's a water-powered tide mill and a Grade 1 Listed timber-framed structure, restored by the River Lea Tidal Mill Trust and open to the public on the first Sunday of the month, March to December (Info: 020 8980 4626).

Next to it is the Miller's House, now the visitor centre, and opposite, is the elegant Grade 2 Listed Clock Mill (1817). The adjacent Customs House and the cobbled streets combine to create a delightful 18thC streetscape, right in the heart of the East End. Also nearby is the grand Abbey Mills Victorian waste pumping station – such an over-the-top building locals referred to it as London's 'cathedral of sewage'!

There are 24hr visitor moorings at Enfield Lock.
Also nearby: Limehouse Basin, the River Thames & the River Thames Path, Canary Wharf & London Docklands.
Nearest tubes: Bromley-by-Bow or Mile End.

Contact details:
Three Mills Island, Bromley-by-Bow, Greater London
Posted at 12/2/2004 00:06 by energyi
BOW BACK PLANNING (excerpt)

To bring cruising boats to these waterways, there need to be destinations there to which the boaters will feel attracted. We suggest several possibilities :
· The Three Mills complex is already a major destination, but access by boat is not easy for the reason explained in the next bullet point.
· Visitor moorings. One problem with much of the Bow Back Rivers and the adjacent section of the Lee Navigation is their high, vertical walls from the water up to the towpath. This means that many boaters pass straight through the Navigation without stopping. Means will need to be devised for overcoming this, possibly by using pontoons, which in turn means considerable care will need to be taken in finding locations where there is sufficient breath of water that navigation is not impeded.
· Services for boats. That area of London is short of facilities for boaters. Some are available at Limehouse Basin and others at Springfield Marina, further up the Lee. But an additional location for such services (fuel in particular) here would be very welcome.
· One or more good pubs or restaurants would be an attraction, and would fit in with a mixed development.
· Shopping. At present the only significant place for provisioning for a long way is Tesco opposite Three Mills, but access is not easy because of the problem already noted of high walls.
6. The other way of bringing moving boats to the Back Rivers would be to encourage the industries there to use water transport.
7. The Halcrow report proposes changing the tidal nature of the Mill Pool at the head of Bow Creek. We strongly oppose this proposal. A tidal pool at this point is an integral part of the environment of the Three Mills and essential to the understanding of the mills themselves. We accept that it needs a little tidying up and the old barge beds - a historic structure - restoring, But we do not want anything more radical done. To make the pool non-tidal and introduce a number of permanently-moored vessels would, to our mind, to enhance this area of water but be detrimental to it. We would, however, welcome the presence of a suitable historic vessel (a Thames sailing barge would be ideal) on the barge beds as an exhibit in conjunction with the Mills.

From: Dr Michael L Stevens / London Region Secretary,
The Inland Waterways Association,
...MORE: www.london.gov.uk/london-plan-eip/submissions/subs-3c-nonparts/ InlandWaterwaysAssociation.rtf
Posted at 11/2/2004 22:59 by energyi
FOCUS of Future Development in London: Olympic Resurgence Coming?
Map: / / Overview: /

The Bow Back Rivers are a 3½ -mile (5.5km) system of tidal and semi-tidal waterways which feed into the River Lee Navigation in East London. They cover an area of 640 acres (214 hectares) and lie in the triangle between Stratford, Bromley-By-Bow and Hackney Wick


Stretching along Newham's western border, from the Royal Docks in the south to Stratford in the north, the Lower Lea Valley is set to return to its former glory. After decades of industrial use this area has become blighted and isolated from its neighbouring communities. Newham's regeneration vision means working with partners to restore the Lower Lea Valley, creating a new city district where history and the natural environment will complement high quality mixed use development in a waterside setting.

New transport infrastructure and a canal will link the new communities to neighbouring town centres and the area's historical sites, such as Three Mills Island, an 18th century tidal mill which is now a tourist attraction and one of London's biggest film studios. Business will continue to play a major part in this river valley community, with areas set aside for commercial developments. In addition a comprehensive range of community facilities such as schools, health centres and places of religious worship will support the new communities which will establish themselves in the area.

: MAPS: : : :


"A programme of nine further canal restoration and new waterway schemes will be announced by British Waterways today. Covering 100 miles of waterways, from London to the Lake District, the programme includes the first new canal to be designed for a century - the Bedford & Milton Keynes Waterway - and the revitalisation of the Bow Back Rivers in east London"


= = = = =
LINKS:
Canalboat Thread.....:
Mike Stevens photos..:
Brochure for Tour....:
Photos: Lime to Padd.:
N.&E.London Assoc.Map:
Restoration Plan.....:
Allen M's Boat.......:
Clock Mill...........:
Newham Regeneration..: :
LowerLea Masterplan..:
Olympic Resurgence...:
Lea Valley Walk......: :
Hidden History.......: :
Special..............:

David Lawson (journalist)...:
GaynorWalker:Docklands&Spain:
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