Personal Newcastle walk - Quayside and Grey Street

My Personal Newcastle: Revisiting Places I’ll Never Forget

Some cities you visit; others you carry. Newcastle is one I carry. This walk is a personal one – back through the places that shaped how I see the city, and a look at what time has done to them since.

If you have time for nothing else, watch the film first. Everything below is the context.

Where I went

Newcastle upon Tyne sits at the north-east corner of England, about three hours by train from London. This walk is less a fixed route than a loop through memory – the Quayside down by the Tyne, up the hill into Grainger Town and Grey Street, and out toward the corners that mean something to me. Reckon on two to three miles, longer if you stop as often as I did.

Why these places

Returning to a city you know is a strange kind of travel. You are not discovering it so much as measuring it against the version in your head. Some of what I loved is gone; some of what replaced it is genuinely better. Newcastle has changed fast – the Quayside especially, rebuilt from a half-empty working riverside into something polished and busy – and walking it again is a way of holding the memory and the present in the same frame.

What you will see in the video

  • The Quayside and the bridges over the Tyne – the view I always start from.
  • Grey Street – the curving neoclassical sweep often voted one of England’s finest streets, built in the 1830s under Richard Grainger.
  • Grey’s Monument, the column the whole city centre navigates by.
  • Grainger Town’s Georgian grid and the covered Grainger Market.
  • [Patrick – add the specific personal places featured: a street, a venue, a view that means something to you.]

Practical notes

  • Best time of year: April to October – the riverside wind bites in winter.
  • How long: two to three hours with stops, more if you wander.
  • Walkability: flat by the river, with one steep climb up to Grey Street.
  • Where to start: Newcastle Central station, about ten minutes from the Quayside.
  • What I wish I had known: [Patrick – add the one personal tip you would give a first-time visitor.]

A little history

Newcastle grew on coal and engineering – ‘taking coals to Newcastle’ became a saying for a reason – and the industrialist William Armstrong’s works once powered much of the river. The city takes its name from the medieval ‘new castle’ whose keep still stands near the Tyne. Layer on the 1830s Georgian centre and the modern Sage and BALTIC across the water, and you get a city where several centuries sit within ten minutes’ walk of one another.

Related walks

If you enjoyed this one, you might like these from elsewhere in Britain:

Stay in touch

New walks land on the channel regularly — the easiest way to follow along is to subscribe on YouTube. The full set of written companions to every film lives in The Journal, and there’s a curated set of the longer pieces on the Featured Films page. If you’ve got an idea for somewhere I should walk next, send it through the Contact page — I read everything.

Patrick Ashton is a UK-based filmmaker walking the overlooked corners of Britain and Europe. More about Patrick →

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