Tag Archives: Brooklands

Brooklands Online at the AOP

I’m very excited to announce that the Association of Photographers (AOP) will be showing my Spirit of Brooklands project as part of it’s online series of members exhibitions. The exhibition will run from May 9th until June 5th and further details can be found at the AOP site.

The AOP have chosen this image of the Clubhouse as the lead image for the promotion, and it was actually the last image that I photographed in the entire series, thanks to a nudge from the editor of the Brooklands Trust Magazine! I quite like the way the lights and stairs look like the headlights and grill on the front of a car.

The Brooklands Clubhouse

The Brooklands Clubhouse

There’s been a fair amount of publicity for the event so far including online coverage by the London Evening Standard, 55 Baker Street, LondonTown, and Vicinitee.com

I will shortly be announcing another exhibition of prints at the Brooklands Museum so watch this space!

Art Fair

Things have been a bit quiet on the blog lately but that doesn’t mean I have. In November I am taking part in the Windsor Contemporary Art Fair at Windsor Race Course (http://www.windsorcontemporaryartfair.co.uk), and will be showing for the first time some of the Brooklands night shots, as well as some other prints from the archive. There will be a couple of 44″ prints from Brooklands, which I must say do look really quite impressive!

The Private View is on Friday November 9th from 6-9pm and the show is open to the public from 10am – 5pm on Saturday and Sunday, and on the Sunday there is a wine fair “running” at the race course too. Get in touch if you want an invite to the Private View (this also gives you half price entry on the other days).

One of the prints on sale at Windsor

More Brooklands Offerings

I recently returned to Brooklands to photograph the Clubhouse as part of my Spirit of Brooklands Project. Whilst there I also took a photo of the museum’s tribute to the Olympic Cycling Road Race.

The Brooklands Clubhouse


Wicker cyclists at Brooklands Museum

The Spirit of Brooklands

Near where I live is Brooklands, the worlds first ever purpose built motor racing track, and the scene of the first British Grand Prix. During it’s time many land speed records were broken there, and Brooklands became a major centre for automotive technology and development. Opened in 1907 with the remit to enable cars to drive at speeds of 100 miles per hour and above, one of it’s key features was that the track had to be banked. The total length of the track was 3.25 miles (including the finishing straight), and a significant proportion of the course consisted of concrete banking.

The final race took place in 1939 at the outset of the Second World War, as due to damage caused by bombing and trying to disguise the track from the air during the war, it became too expensive to repair it. Actually one more race did take place in 2009 when James May created a Scalextric track around the original course for his Toy Stories TV programme, and had a race between two teams.

There has been significant redevelopment of the site since the war but a large amount of the banking still remains. The Spirit of Brooklands is a project that I undertook with the help of Brooklands Museum (well worth a visit if you are at all interested in cars, bikes, planes or history), to document the remains of the circuit, and areas where the track has been removed but there has been an acknowledgment of its existence.

In its heyday Brooklands was a buzzing noisy place, with cars rattling over concrete at speeds of up to 143.44 mph (the course record), and as many as 287,000 spectators cheering on the drivers. To contrast with this I chose to shoot the project at night during very still weather conditions to give a peaceful, surreal feel to the images. The project took four years to complete, and I have just added the resulting images to my web site.

Some of the vehicles at Brooklands Museum.