;Church The Anglican parish church of All Saints, made of knapped flint, partially dressed in stone, with sturdy tower and medieval spire, was built in the 12th and 13th centuries. It was restored to the specifications of architect
G. E. Street in 1861. The west window was designed by
Dante Gabriel Rossetti and produced by
William Morris's workshop. Records survive showing the site of the church was donated by Nigel de Mowbray,
Lord of the Manor. The spire was a guiding marker for the first proper, scientific, mapping baseline made in Great Britain. This was for the
Anglo-French Survey (1784–1790) which sought to measure the exact distance and direction between the
Royal Observatory, Greenwich and the
Paris Observatory. As a result precisely scaled mapping of the country was enabled, led by General
William Roy. Several hundreds of yards
NNE, a spur of slightly lower upland, Hundred Acres, likely marked with a tower or post, was used to make sightings north to Hanger Hill Tower, south-east to
Botley Hill, east to
Upper Norwood, and west to
St Ann's Hill, the first and later triangulation points. ;Well The old village well stands to the east of the town centre in Woodmansterne Lane. It is almost deep and was last used around the end of the 19th century. The wellhead cover dates from the 18th century and holds old winding gear. ;Nork Park Nork Park contains the remains of the
Colman family mansion (associated with Colman's Mustard). ;Tumble Beacon A large mound off The Drive, close to
the Beacon School, is known as the Tumble Beacon. Originally a
Bronze Age bowl barrow, it was enlarged circa the sixteenth century, and is believed to have been the site of one of a series of beacons/bonfires that stretched from the south coast towards London warning of the arrival of the
Spanish Armada.
Demolished On the site of
Downview and
Highdown Prisons by the end of the 19th century stood one of the London County Lunatic Asylums, Banstead Asylum, a psychiatric hospital from 1873 to 1986. After being sent by panel to treatment there in the late 1960s, singer-songwriter
Vincent Crane wrote the song "Banstead," which featured on the 1970 album sharing his band's name
Atomic Roooster. In the 1890s the asylum had two small lodges, a small hospital, a cemetery and a coal-gas works. == Open space ==