A small estate of detached houses off Blackbrook Road in Lodge Moor. A few of the houses fronting onto the Road were built in the mid 1930s the rest appear to date from the mid 1950s. Complete excavation of a group of three disturbed bronze age barrows took place at this time also. Prior to the housing the area is shown as Lodge Moor Hall plantation. The area was split into roughly equal compartments. One compartment contained Lodge Moor Hall, another trees and the rest appear to be empty. It seems as if the compartments were being cropped at different times. The Fairbanks plan of 1795 shows a single enclosure probably created through the parliamentary enclosure award of Upper Hallam in 1791. Before this the area was open moorland. Legibility is fragmentary as the polygon is bounded by old roads and the name of the moorland (Lodge Moor) persists. The origin of the moorland landscape is uncertain though this area is likely to be moorland by the Roman period (see Bevan 2003 for discussion of environmental evidence).