St John Street, Oxford

http://dbpedia.org/resource/St_John_Street,_Oxford an entity of type: Thing

St John Street is a street in central Oxford, England. The street mainly consists of Georgian-style stone-faced Grade II listed terraced houses. It was built as a speculative development by St John's College starting in the 1820s and finishing in the 1840s at the start of the Victorian era.At the northern end is Rewley House (housing Oxford University's Department of Continuing Education) and near the southern end is the Sackler Library, which opened in 2001. To the south is Beaumont Street and to the north is Wellington Square. St John Street runs parallel with St Giles' (linked via Pusey Street) to the east and Walton Street to the west. rdf:langString
rdf:langString St John Street, Oxford
rdf:langString St John Street
rdf:langString St John Street
xsd:float 51.75583267211914
xsd:float -1.261666655540466
xsd:integer 5238120
xsd:integer 1111352598
rdf:langString Looking north along St John Street
rdf:langString north
rdf:langString south
rdf:langString Oxford, England
rdf:langString Location within Oxford
xsd:string 51.755833333333335 -1.2616666666666667
rdf:langString St John Street is a street in central Oxford, England. The street mainly consists of Georgian-style stone-faced Grade II listed terraced houses. It was built as a speculative development by St John's College starting in the 1820s and finishing in the 1840s at the start of the Victorian era.At the northern end is Rewley House (housing Oxford University's Department of Continuing Education) and near the southern end is the Sackler Library, which opened in 2001. To the south is Beaumont Street and to the north is Wellington Square. St John Street runs parallel with St Giles' (linked via Pusey Street) to the east and Walton Street to the west. Note that part of Merton Street was once known as St John Street.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 5734
xsd:string south
xsd:string north
<Geometry> POINT(-1.2616666555405 51.755832672119)

data from the linked data cloud