Back Roads Great Britain (Eyewitness Travel Back Roads)

(Tina Meador) #1

32


A two-hour walking tour
Walk downhill from the Tourist
Information Centre (TIC) 1. Turn left
along St Andrew’s Street to Market
Place, which is overlooked by the
15th-century St Ia’s 2 , built in the
local textured granite, with a
24-m (80-ft) tower. It has
carved sandstone pillars,
choir stalls, a gilded roof
and a Madonna sculpture
by Barbara Hepworth.
Turn right to join Wharf
Road 3 which leads around
the harbour to a tiny 16th-
century chapel on Smeaton’s
Pier 4 where, nowadays, just a few
fishermen still land their catch.
A warren of cobbled streets climbs
steeply up into Downalong, the oldest
part of town, once home to the fishing

community. Go along Sea View Place
to St Ives Museum 5 (open Easter–Oct,
closed Sun) in Wheal Dream which tells
the town’s history – one gallery has
paintings from the 1880s when the
celebrated St Ives School of Artists
was formed. Continue down
a narrow walkway to steps
above the sea and around
the car park above the tiny
Porthgwidden Beach and its
excellent café. With the sea
on your right, continue onto
the grassy headland of the
Island, which has the tiny
St Nicholas Chapel 6 at the
top. Drop down again to the car park.
Carry on along Porthmeor Road and
right into Back Road West and right
again onto the seafront for the Tate St
Ives Gallery 7 (Mar–Oct, open daily;
Nov–Feb, closed Mon), a striking white
building with a large convex window.
It features artists painting in Cornwall
in the mid-20th century.
Walk back along the seafront,
bearing right into The Digey and
right again into Fore Street, the main
street. Fork right uphill, following
signs to the Barbara Hepworth
Museum and Sculpture Garden 8
(Mar–Oct, open daily; Nov–Feb, closed
Mon) on Barnoon Hill. The sculptor, a
key figure in the development of
abstract art in Europe, worked in the
house for 26 years, and her sculptures
are dotted around house and garden.
Head downhill from the museum,
turn right and go steeply uphill at the
next junction signed Trewyn Gardens.
Cross these to the far exit leading to a
T-junction. Turn left towards the High
Street. Return to the TIC via Tregenna
Place, past the Library which, like many
of the galleries in town, displays work
by local artists or created locally.
ª Exit on the B3306 towards St Just
and Land’s End. Zennor is just off the
road on the right after 8 km (5 miles).

WHERE TO STAY

ST IVES
Rivendell inexpensive
Award-winning family-run guesthouse
near sea and town centre; offers evening
meals, packed lunches and car park.
7 Porthminster Terrace, TR26 2DQ;
01736 794 923;
http://www.rivendell-stives.co.uk
Boskerris Hotel moderate–expensive
Smart but friendly hotel above Carbis
Bay with 15 stylish rooms (most have
sea views), decked terrace and a garden.
Boskerris Road, TR26 2NQ; 01736 795
295; http://www.boskerrishotel.co.uk

AROUND ZENNOR
Gurnard’s Head moderate
Small and cosy inn in an imposing
building near the sea amidst a wild
Cornish landscape. Excellent restaurant.
Treen, TR26 3DE (3 km/2 miles
west of Zennor); 01736 796 928;
http://www.gurnardshead.co.uk

VISITING ST IVES

Parking
The steep streets get very congested.
Park at the top of the town and walk
down to the harbour. Upper Trenwith
Car Park provides a shuttle bus down.
Tourist Information
The Guildhall, Street an Pol, TR26 2DS;
01736 796 297; http://www.visit-cornwall.
com; closed Sat pm, Sun

1 St Ives
Cornwall; TR26 2DS
Once Cornwall’s busiest pilchard-fishing port, St Ives suffered as fish
stocks declined at the start of the 20th century. Help had arrived with
the advent of the railway in 1877, as the trains brought holidaymakers
to the town. Artists, including Turner, were also drawn by the clear
light there, and many of the harbourside net lofts were now converted
to artists’ studios. The fishing never recovered, but the visitors kept
coming, attracted by the fine sandy beaches and many art galleries.

BACK ROADS GREAT BRITAIN


Where to Stay: inexpensive, under £80; moderate, £80–£150; expensive, over £150

St Ives
Museum sign

0 metres

0 yards

300

300

%*(^5 )&
&:
#"3/00/
)*--

":^3 -

"/&

8)"

' 3
3 0"

%

*^4 -

"/

%^3

%

(^5) )&
 (^8) "
(^33) &/
#&%
'03%3
0"%
8/%4 03
)
-- )() 45
8 &^4
5 ^1 -
"$&
013
5 )
.&
03
)



  • -




103

5 ).&

03 ^3 %

'^0

3 &

^4

53 &

&^5

#"$,^3

% 8 &^45

(^031)
5 ).
&^0 33%
5 )& 8 )"^3
'
5 )&^4
5 &//"
$,
5 )& 5 & (^33) "$
&
0ORTHMEOR
"EACH
0ORTHGWIDDEN
"EACH
(ARBOUR
."3,&51-"$&
53&(&//"1-"$&
5PVSJTU
OGPSNBUJPO$FOUSF
4UMBT
4NFBUPOT
1JFS
4U
WFT.VTFVN
4U/JDIPMBT
$IBQFM
5BUF
4U*WFT(BMMFSZ
#BSCBSB)FQXPSUI
.VTFVNBOE
4DVMQUVSF(BSEFO

Free download pdf