Largely redeveloped as high rise student flats in 2005 the area retains parts of the late 19th century Eclipse Cutlery Works and the frontage of the early 20th century Locarno Cinema (although everything behind the façade has been demolished. The area lies to the immediate east of the site of the hamlet of 'Little Sheffield' and was depicted as piecemeal enclosure fields by a Fairbank sketch map in 1789 (reproduced in May, 2003 illustration 3). The areas was laid out as streets by 1818 (ibid, 3) with a pattern typical of the late 18th and early 19th centuries in the city centre with streets made up of predominantly back to back housing with small courtyards a regular feature - often containing workshops of various sizes. Between 1851 and 1891 the small trades being carried on in domestic scale workshops (ibid p4) were joined by larger dedicated works complexes including the Brunswick Steel Works, the Highfield Steel and Wire Works and the Eclipse Cutlery Works. From WW II to the near present the earlier buildings of this area were progressively demolished - resulting from a combination of slum clearance, bomb damage and manufacturing recession. Fragmentary legibility of street pattern and earlier buildings.