Restricted access - New Cross Gate Cutting

New Cross Gate Cutting

New Cross Gate Cutting credit Sam Bentley Toon

Fox cub at New Cross Gate Cutting

Fox cub at New Cross Gate Cutting credit Jeremiah Quinn

Restricted access - New Cross Gate Cutting

A secluded area of woodland in South London, with small grassy glades, set on the broad slopes of a deep railway cutting, which supports 170 species of flowering plants

Location

Vesta Road
Brockley
SE4 2NT
A static map of Restricted access - New Cross Gate Cutting

Know before you go

Size
3 hectares

Grazing animals

No

Access

The reserve is halfway between New Cross Gate and Brockley rail stations, on the railway’s west side. The entrance is via a gate in Vesta Road.

The entrance is wide but paths are narrow and there are steps. Footpaths are rough and sometimes steep, with a set of steep steps at the north end.

Dogs

Assistance dogs only

When to visit

Opening times

Although the site is not open on a regular basis, there are open days and regular workdays. If you would like to volunteer on the site please email
shawkins@wildlondon.org.uk

Best time to visit

April to July

About the reserve

Brockley’s New Cross Gate Cutting is predominantly oak woodland with open glades of neutral and acid grassland in which reeds and tall herbs grow. Some flowers are locally rare, and the site contributes to one of London’s most important railway cuttings for wildlife, stretching southwards to Forest Hill.

The cutting was dug in 1838-39 and still bears the legacy of once being part of the old Great North Wood, and at times the route of the Croydon Canal, brickworks, and wartime allotments.

The site, also once known as Brockley Nature Reserve, contributes to one of the most important railway cuttings for wildlife in London. 

History of New Cross Gate Cutting

A narrower cutting at this site was first cut in 1801-03, for the Croydon Canal. Later it was widened as part of the Brighton Main Line that was built along the route. Thanks to its isolation the steep western side of the railway bank, since the 1960s, became a hugely important wooded wildlife site. In 1987 a deal was struck by the Trust with the former British Rail to manage the site, and this arrangement continues today with Network Rail.  

Get involved at New Cross Gate Cutting

Record species you've spotted at New Cross Gate Cutting 

Volunteer with New Cross Gate Cutting's team

For information on the next volunteering day, contact Simon Hawkins: shawkins@wildlondon.org.uk

Contact us

Simon Hawkins