An area within a larger bylaw suburb (HSY 1831) where higher density terraces were cleared between 1967 and 1987 and replaced by new housing (presumed housing association). The new houses are traditionally built but arranged around small courtyard gardens giving the area an enclosed and secure feel enhanced by the breaking up of the earlier bylaw road into sections divided b entirely pedestrian areas. A reference to the earlier urban environment is made by the retention of a repositioned sewer gas lamp at the centre of the development. This area of grid iron streets was laid out around the 1870s (from directory maps). A variety of designs is present with older types to the north of these streets. The area is almost entirely free from industrial buildings. Edges of this polygon defined by the edge of development at 1891 to the east (formerly meadows alongside the goit between Cooper and Clough wheels), Shoreham Street to the west (mostly sports grounds at Bramall Lane and Sheaf House in 1891) and St Mary's church and the John Street industrial area to the north west. Much of this area was occupied in the 1850s with large ornamental grounds around the nearby houses of Clough House and Cottage, Sheaf House, White House and Cherry Mount. These properties represented the gentrification and of an area which was depicted in 1808 by Fairbank as farmland characterised by surveyed enclosures. This 18th and early 19th century landscape was almost entirely redrawn at the time of its conversion to building ground. Fragmentary legibility of early bylaw suburb provided by retention of parts of the earlier street line and the context of the development within retained bylaw terracing.