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Architecture of London

05 August 2009
1901 – New Brabazon House, Moreton Street, London

1901 – New Brabazon House, Moreton Street, London

Architect: R. Stephen Ayling

09 August 2010
1901 – Passmore Edwards Sailors Palace, London

1901 – Passmore Edwards Sailors Palace, London

Architect: Niven & Wigglesworth Built in 1901 as the headquarters of the British & Foreign Sailors’ Society. An inscription above the door still records the fact, although the building itself has been converted...

06 July 2010
1901 – St. Gabriel’s Parish House, Pimlico, London

1901 – St. Gabriel’s Parish House, Pimlico, London

Architect: W. Campbell Jones Published in The Building News, June 7th 1901

05 August 2009
1901 – The Leysian Mission, City Road, London

1901 – The Leysian Mission, City Road, London

Architect: Bradshaw & Gass

04 May 2010
1902 – Four Houses at Hampstead, London

1902 – Four Houses at Hampstead, London

Architect: Cyril E. Power Published in The Building News, September 19th 1902.

06 July 2010
1902 – House at Belvedere Drive, Wimbledon, London

1902 – House at Belvedere Drive, Wimbledon, London

Architect: A. Saxon Snell & E. Godfrey Page Elevations to Belvedere Drive & Garden Front Section, Ground & 1st floor plans published in The Building News, August 22nd 1902.

21 October 2010
1902 – Interior of Westminster Cathedral under construction

1902 – Interior of Westminster Cathedral under construction

Interior of Westminster Cathedral under construction and illustrated in The Builder, January 2nd 1904. In June 1900 the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) held an Architectural Congress, and its first visit was...

05 August 2009
1903 – Acton County School, London

1903 – Acton County School, London

Architect: A. Hessell Tiltman

07 August 2009
1903 – Alliance Assurance Offices, 88 St. James’s Street, London

1903 – Alliance Assurance Offices, 88 St. James’s Street, London

Architect: Richard Norman Shaw & Ernest Newton Closing the west end of Pall Mall, this is a good exampled of Shaw’s later baroque style – finished in stone.