I attended a meeting yesterday to look at plans for the improvement of the public realm on Old Bond Street. Our attention was drawn to the view of the so-called Ferragamo building on the corner of Old Bond Street and Burlington Gardens. I had never really looked at it with its flèche reminiscent of Ste. Chapelle. It was built in the mid-1920s for Atkinson’s, a firm of parfumiers, and has prominent public lettering recording this:-
Tag Archives: London
St. Bride
I went to see St. Bride at lunch-time today. It’s not a church that I know at all well, tucked as it is on an alleyway behind the old Reuter’s building off Fleet Street. The spire is particularly magnificent, built between 1701 and 1703 to a design that replicates the spire on the Warrant design for St. Paul’s. The interior is an over-luxurious remodelling after catastrophic war damage. In the churchyard, I spotted the tomb of Samuel Richardson:-
Unilever House (3)
It was a breezy morning as I walked across Blackfriars Bridge and was able to admire the grand, monumental classicism of our new home in Unilever House, together with its jazz moderne and Egyptomanic detailing:-
Albert Bridge
I walked back over Albert Bridge, an amazing piece of Victorian engineering, connecting the residential parts of Battersea to Chelsea. It was originally designed by Rowland Mason Ordish in 1873 and was then reinforced a decade later by Joseph Bazalgette. Soldiers must break step as they cross it:-
The DoodleBar
I was asked to lunch in the DoodleBar in Battersea, a part of town I scarcely know: the old Ransome’s Dock with Norman Foster’s office on the river behind:-
Luxborough Tower
I have been reading Nicholas Taylor’s The Village in the City, a classic of early 1970s invective against the inhumanity of tower blocks, which made me interested to see how well Luxborough Tower survives behind the University of Westminster, now semi-privatised, but designed in 1965 on the site of a Victorian workhouse in the high noon of tower blocks:-
Brook Street
I found myself in the west end today which I normally try to avoid at the weekend. It gave me time to examine the detailing on some of the houses in Brook Street at the Hanover Square end. This is Nos. 14-16 with what Pevsner describes as ‘undercooked-looking’ terracotta:-
This is Nos.2-4, Jacobethan by C.O. Parnell:-
Breakfast at the Ritz
It’s a long while since I’ve had breakfast at the Ritz where we used to conduct a lot of business when I was at the NPG. We were choosing the winners of this year’s Mayfair Awards. I’m not the best person to choose a jeweller and am sadly unable to distinguish the qualities of the Savile Row tailors, but enjoyed the opportunity to find out about new pop-up coffee shops. Underlying a lot of the discussion was the distinction between new Mayfair – the many new shops which have opened in the last year – and the old Mayfair of grand hotels, auction houses and gun shops. Sad to hear that Dover Street Market may be moving out:-
St. Paul’s Cathedral
I was told last night that much the best view of St. Paul’s Cathedral was from the roof of One New Change, the large and not very prepossessing shopping mall which dominates its chancel end. It’s true that, rather amazingly, long before the shops open, it is possible to take the lift up on to the roof and there survey not just the great dome of St. Paul’s, but the whole of London and its changing roofscape beyond:-
The Black Friar
The nearest landmark to our new offices is The Black Friar, an astonishing, richly ornamented, still surviving Arts-and-Crafts pub, built in 1873, but magnificently revamped in 1905 with ample lettering and assorted signage outside and again restored in the 1980s by Jamie Troughton of Troughton McAslan:-



















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