The 1920s map linked below shows where the Page family (and Eliza's father Charles Woodbine were living in 1921. In the centre of the linked map view you will see an L-shaped group of buildings in the corner of a plot labelled with 95 and .435. By comparing the 1911 census with the 1911 Valuation Survey records (dating from October 1913 for this site) I have linked the 1911 census sequence of Smith, Woodbine, Whatley and Carpenter households in Springhead Lane to a 1913 group of four cottages with the same occupants and address.
In the survey, for the purposes of description, the four households have been grouped and described as:
Old B & T 4 rm cottage, 2 WCs for 4 cots
& garden
Although this says 4 rooms, the 1911 census says 3 rooms for each household. I *guess* that B & T means brick and thatch.
https://maps.nls.uk/view/114485758#zoom=5.8&lat=2150&lon=12547&layers=BTThere is a further detail o be gleaned from these records to add to something mentioned in my reply #7. I mentioned that there were two baptisms for daughters of Mary Jane Woodbine who was presumably the sister of Eliza Page (Woodbine). These are linked to a father's name John William Palmer. In the 1911 census the Carpenter family in the group of four cottages is:
Harriet Carpenter 47, widow
John William Palmer, 26, son
plus four other children all named Carpenter.
In the Valuation Survey the occupier of the Carpenter cottage is listed as J W Carpenter. I assume that this is actually John William Palmer. Perhaps he was the child of Hannah's first marriage? But I imagine that this is getting too far away from your interests.
Added: Palmer was Hannah’s maiden name.