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Avenue House - Finchley, London
The Mansion has a reputation of unexplained activity dating back many years

Ghost Hunts at Avenue House in Finchley, London are daunting to say the least. Spending the night in this haunted mansion on one of our overnight ghost hunts is something that you would definitely need to think very carefully about. This haunted house is a mansion to be wary of and is certainly a location where you will need your wits about you, not to mention a strong nerve.

The cellar has many shocks in store for anyone brave enough to carry out a vigil in this area, not to mention the rooms that leave you wanting to run when things start to happen. Ghost hunting at Avenue House is a must for anybody who can endure the intense activity here. The spirits that have been seen here really do test your belief system, this is a place where you really do not want to be on your own. This is a very active old mansion with much to offer any one who dares to spend the night. Join us and take part in a formidable ghost hunting experience with the Haunted Happenings team.

Avenue House

Your Ghost Hunt at Avenue House


Avenue House in haunted Finchley has a reputation of unexplained occurrences dating back many years. During past overnight ghost hunts here sinister footsteps have often been heard coming from locked rooms, ghostly shadows and figures have been witnessed in the chilling cellar rooms.

Join Haunted Happenings as we carry out vigils and experiments, witness for yourself Finchley's haunted mansion in the dead of night. During the night there will be opportunity to explore the location for yourselves and for the brave the chance to spend time alone in the sinister cellars.

Ghosts of Avenue House


Avenue House has many ghost who are seen wandering the corridors and not just in the dead of night. Visitors and staff at the mansion often encounter unexplained activity and have experienced unexplained cold spots, hushed conversations from empty rooms chilling screams from the upper floors whilst children's laughter has been heard coming up from the cellars along with the apparition of a lady being seen to walk the stairs and disappear when reaching the top landing, is this one of the former governesses of Avenue House?

The cellar areas seem to be a magnet for children, where previous guests have felt unexplained cold spots and objects have been moved by unseen hands.

History of Avenue House


Avenue House has a history dating back almost 1000 years. Once owned by the Bishop of London and built on land that was granted to the Knights Templars, known as Temple Croft Fields. The Knights Templars were one of the most powerful forces in this area. These lands were seized by Henry VIII and for the next few hundred years the lands passed through various hands.

In the mid 1800's, Edward Cooper, built Avenue House. In 1874, Avenue House was then bought by Henry Inky Charles Stephens, Inky because his father was the inventor of the famous blue-black ink. In 1918, Inky sadly passed away leaving his entire estate to the people of Finchley.

In 1989 the east wing of the house was gutted by fire, but it has been restored to its former condition. The house is now a meetings and events venue, while the gardens and arboretum are open to the public free of charge. The house and gardens are now managed by an independent charitable body, the Avenue House Estate Trust, which took over responsibility from London Borough of Barnet in 2002.

The stables are a courtyard complex of buildings in a Gothic Revival Style by Rodgers Field, comprising a stable range with tower on the north, a coach house on the east side and a two storey coachman's house (the Lodge) opposite the tower. The design of the dovecote attached to the stables has strong similarities to the tower of Christ's College Hendon Lane, built by E.Roberts 20 years earlier, and may have been consciously modelled on it. The buildings were constructed in yellow brick with stone dressings and slate roofs to the rear of the Coach House, where a reinforced concrete retaining wall matches the Bothy wall construction.

The construction of the 'Bothy', as it is now known, was part of Stephen's original plans when he purchased the estate in 1874, but work didn't start until 1878. Stephens produced sketch plans for 'garden walls and buildings' shortly after his purchase of the property and prior to the appointment of a formal architect. 

The site of the Bothy, or the kitchen garden as it was then known, was chosen under Marnock's guidance. The setting of the Bothy is integral to the landscape design as a whole. The idea of buildings as landscape elements has earlier associations in landscape design, for example the 18th Century picturesque designs of Capability Brown incorporating follies, temples and 'ruins'. The Bothy's castellated walls, and its location as an eye catcher at the top of the cascade, fit with this romantic landscape tradition. It was also designed to be viewed from the drive and probably from the upper floors of the house. It fits well with both Marnock's approach and that of Pulham whom he'd worked closely with constructing cascades and garden features on other commissions. 

Given Marnock's role in the design and layout of the grounds and location of the Bothy, he would certainly have had ideas as regards the structure and perhaps the Moorish design of the castellated walls which makes it distinct and clearly different from the house and other buildings on the estate. 

The Bothy is a large rectangular enclosure, containing a garden with ancillary buildings to the eastern end. The buildings, divided off from the garden by a high concrete wall comprise a central two storey 'core' building that create courtyards either side to north & south with single storey outbuildings built into and facing inwards from the north and south walls. The Bothy is an early surviving example of reinforced concrete, the garden walls externally rendered in pebble-dash, the courtyard outbuildings in smooth render and the two storey core building smooth render finished and scored to resemble ashlar work. 

The Bothy was conceived to allow the whole estate to be self-sufficient, through provision of glasshouses, fish ponds and forcing pits within the garden, storage (for seed, food, tools and machinery), a dairy, an abattoir, room for farriers, and housing for the principal estate workers all being found within it. 

The Bothy 'sheds' appear complete by late 1880, given Stephens decided then to introduce a herd of highland cattle to the Estate on the adjoining Great Tapes Field, east of the gardens. The facilities of the building no doubt provided for the needs of the household and the farm, but they were also an 'experiment' for Stephens to explore further his interests and ideas. The Estate maintained the herd of highland cattle, a flock of sheep and a stable of Cleveland Bay Horses. It was certainly a prototype upon which he was able to develop and explore ideas that led to the creation of the Cholderton Estate, considered at the forefront of research into crops, breeding and animal husbandry from 1900 onwards and a leading example of a 'New Model Farm'. 

The shell of the kitchen garden was completed by July 1882. It is certain that Marnock, with his 'cutting edge' expertise in hot houses would have advised on the internal layout of the kitchen garden, the orientation and positioning of the glass houses and forcing pits. The glasshouses were supplied by William Temple and laid out in a symmetrical arrangement on the north wall and within the garden. There was a tropical house with palms, vineries, greenhouses, cucumber, melon and tomato pits and an orchard house for some vegetables and strawberry growing. There was a well and a sunken forcing house, and there were brick cold frames which remained until the 1960s.

Your Event Includes


  • Use of ghost hunting equipment including EMF Meters, K2 Meters etc.
  • Experiments including glass divination, table tipping and Ouija Boards.
  • Workshop and separate vigils for returning guests.
  • Ghost hunting vigils and séances in small groups.
  • Includes teas and coffees
  • Free time to investigate alone

Address, Maps & Hotels


Address & Hotel Information

Avenue House 17 East End Road Finchley London N3 3QE

For Hotels near to Avenue House , please click here. opens in a new window


Parking
  • Free Onsite Parking

Information


Accessibility
  • This location is not suitable for wheelchair users
  • This location is not suitable for people with mobility issues or walking difficulties

Important
  • All attendees must be 18 years or older
  • All attendees must bring a torch
  • Wear sensible shoes and warm layered clothing as the location may get cold at night

Avenue House - Dates

Ghost Hunt at Avenue House, Finchley - Saturday 27th April 2024

Ghost Hunt at Avenue House

Saturday 27th April 2024
Time: 9.00pm - 3.00am

Ghost Hunt at Avenue House

SOLD
OUT

  • Saturday 27th April 2024
  • Time: 9.00pm - 3.00am
  • FULLY BOOKED
Ghost Hunt at Avenue House, Finchley - Saturday 27th July 2024 £59.00 Per Person

Ghost Hunt at Avenue House

Saturday 27th July 2024
Time: 9.00pm - 3.00am

Places Available

Ghost Hunt at Avenue House

27 Jul

  • Saturday 27th July 2024
  • Time: 9.00pm - 3.00am
  • Places Available
  • £59.00 Per Person

Paying for your event

We are an online events company, so the simplest and quickest way to book is via our website.

Alternatively, if you would like to book over the phone then please call our Sales Team on 0115 9720570 and they will be happy to help.

Securing places by a deposit

Paying a deposit for your event will secure your places on your chosen event. Simply pay a small deposit* of £20.00 per person and pay the remainder in full 4 weeks before the event or by small instalments* via your online account if available. You can always pay for your event in full at the time of booking.

Types of payments accepted

We accept the following payment methods

  • Online - All Major Credit/Debit Cards
  • Over the telephone

*Please note that full payment for your event will be due 4 weeks before the event. Minimal instalments of £30.00, payment must be made via your online account area.

Opening Hours

Monday: 9:00am - 7:00pm
Tuesday: 9:00am - 7:00pm
Wednesday: 9:00am - 7:00pm
Thursday: 9:00am - 7:00pm
Friday: 9:00am - 7:00pm
Saturday: 10:00am - 5:00pm
Sunday: 10:00am - 12:00pm
Bank Holidays: Closed

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