TowManVan provides 24/7 jump start service across NW11 - covering Golders Green station's Northern line interchange and the Jewish community high street, Hampstead Garden Suburb's Lutyens-designed Conservation Area with its wide tree-lined streets and generous driveways, Temple Fortune's Finchley Road shopping parade near Henlys Corner, and the Hampstead Heath Extension's woodland-edge residential streets - with technicians arriving in an average of 18 minutes and pricing from £49. NW11 is outside the Congestion Charge zone with no CC surcharge. Whether your battery has died on Golders Green Road after Shabbat, on a Garden Suburb driveway under the Lutyens tree canopy, at the Temple Fortune Waitrose, or on a Heath Extension approach road, a DBS-checked technician reaches you with no call-out fee.
TowManVan provides 24/7 jump start service across NW11 - covering Golders Green station's Northern line interchange and the Jewish community high street, Hampstead Garden Suburb's Lutyens-designed Conservation Area with its wide tree-lined streets and generous driveways, Temple Fortune's Finchley Road shopping parade near Henlys Corner, and the Hampstead Heath Extension's woodland-edge residential streets - with technicians arriving in an average of 18 minutes and pricing from £49. NW11 is outside the Congestion Charge zone with no CC surcharge. Whether your battery has died on Golders Green Road after Shabbat, on a Garden Suburb driveway under the Lutyens tree canopy, at the Temple Fortune Waitrose, or on a Heath Extension approach road, a DBS-checked technician reaches you with no call-out fee.
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Golders Green station sits at the junction of Finchley Road and North End Road - a Northern line stop where the Edgware and High Barnet branches converge. The station is a major transport interchange with one of London's largest bus terminuses (approximately 15 routes), serving as a hub for communities across Barnet and beyond. The Golders Green Hippodrome - a Grade II listed 1913 theatre designed by Bertie Crewe, originally a music hall, later a BBC concert venue, and now an Islamic community centre - dominates the North End Road approach. Golders Green Road runs north-west from the station towards Temple Fortune and is the commercial heart of the Jewish community: Carmelli Bakery (challah, rugelach and babka since 1963), Blooms (the famous kosher restaurant, now closed but its legacy endures in newer establishments), Sam Stoller & Sons (kosher butcher), Jewish bookshops, charity shops and numerous kosher restaurants. The road also has a notable Japanese presence - Japanese restaurants, a Japanese bookshop and the London Japanese School's Saturday programme draw families from across London. Pay-and-display bays on Golders Green Road have 2-hour maximums during the day. The surrounding residential streets - Rotherwick Road, Woodstock Avenue, The Riding, Princes Park Avenue - have controlled parking zones. TowManVan technicians approach via the A41 Finchley Road, reaching the station area in 16–20 minutes.
Hampstead Garden Suburb is one of the most architecturally significant residential areas in Britain - a planned community founded in 1907 by Dame Henrietta Barnett (wife of Canon Samuel Barnett of Toynbee Hall) with the vision of creating a mixed-income neighbourhood that combined the best of urban and rural living. The Suburb was planned by Sir Raymond Unwin and Barry Parker (the architects of Letchworth Garden City) and features individual houses designed by Sir Edwin Lutyens (who designed the two churches flanking Central Square - the Anglican St Jude's and the Free Church), M.H. Baillie Scott, C.H.B. Quennell and other Arts and Crafts architects. The entire Suburb is a Conservation Area managed by the Hampstead Garden Suburb Trust, which enforces strict aesthetic controls - residents cannot erect satellite dishes, replace original windows, alter external paintwork or build extensions without Trust approval. The streets - Meadway (the Suburb's grandest avenue, with detached houses by Lutyens), Wildwood Road, Hampstead Way, Corringham Road, Kingsley Way, Lyttelton Road, Heathgate - are wide, tree-lined and quiet, with generous plots, front gardens and driveways. Car ownership is high - 2–3 vehicles per household in the larger Lutyens houses - and vehicles parked on driveways under the Suburb's mature tree canopy face cold-exposure battery failure during winter.
Temple Fortune occupies the northern portion of NW11, centred on the junction of Finchley Road (A598) and Henlys Corner (the A1/A598/A41 roundabout at the NW11/N3 border). The Temple Fortune parade - Finchley Road between Bridge Lane and Henlys Corner - has a prosperous suburban-village character: a Waitrose, independent shops, kosher restaurants and cafés, estate agents and service businesses. The parade serves the Hampstead Garden Suburb community to the east and the Childs Hill (NW2) area to the west. Henlys Corner - a large roundabout recently redesigned by TfL to improve pedestrian and cyclist safety - is NW11's primary junction with the strategic road network. The A1 runs north from Henlys Corner towards East Finchley and Highgate, the A598 continues north towards Finchley Central (N3), and the A41 runs west towards Hendon (NW4) and the M1. TowManVan technicians approaching from the north use Henlys Corner as the primary entry to NW11, reaching Temple Fortune addresses in 17–21 minutes. The Finchley Road corridor through NW11 carries heavy north–south traffic and has limited on-street parking - pay-and-display bays serve the Temple Fortune shops, with overflow parking on the residential side streets.
The southern portion of NW11 borders Hampstead Heath - specifically the Hampstead Heath Extension (a 34-acre addition to the main Heath, acquired in 1907, the same year the Garden Suburb was founded) and the Sandy Heath area to the south. North End - a narrow road connecting Golders Green to the Spaniards Road and Hampstead (NW3) via a steep descent through ancient woodland - passes through one of London's most secluded spots. Wyldes - a Grade II listed 17th-century farmhouse on North End - has hosted John Linnell, William Blake and other artists. The road is narrow, tree-canopied and steep, with limited passing places. The Heath Extension has no formal car park - visitors park on North End Road, Wildwood Road and the surrounding Garden Suburb streets. The Sandy Heath woodland - ancient oaks and beeches between the Extension and the main Heath - creates a cold, shaded microclimate that produces lower overnight temperatures than the more open streets to the north. Vehicles parked on the Heath-edge streets overnight face temperatures that mirror the Highgate (N6) and Hampstead (NW3) hilltop conditions - 2–3°C colder than the Finchley Road corridor 500 metres west. TowManVan technicians serving the Heath Extension approach via North End Road from Golders Green station.
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Last updated May 2026.
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