1920 – Tobacco Warehouse, Victoria Docks, London
Published in The Building News, July 30 1920: “At present it is proposed to erect only parts of this building,
Published in The Building News, July 30 1920: “At present it is proposed to erect only parts of this building,
Following the end of the war in 1918, plans were made to commemorate the Bridlington’s fallen with a suitable memorial.
Known as Hardingham Memorial Hall after the dead of the First World War. Published in The Building News,
Published in The Building News, July 30 1920: “The accommodation furnished by this range of buildings includes the officials and staff of the warehouse-keeper’s de- partment and its allies,
In 1790, Dickins and Smith opened a shop at 54, Oxford Street, at the sign of the Golden Lion.
The Port of London Authority was established in the 1900s to oversee what were then the busiest and most important docks in the world.
After Edward Cecil Guinness, first Earl Iveagh, took over the Elveden estate, he appointed William Caroe to build an entirely new village church beside the old.
The first Lloyd’s building (at 12 Leadenhall Street in the City of London) had been built on this site in 1928.
The School, originally “The Dean Close Memorial School”, was founded in 1886 in memory of local former of Cheltenham and Dean of Carlisle Cathedral,
As part of the firm of Helmle & Corbett, Harvey Wiley Corbett had designed Bush Tower,
Map is being rolled out, not all buildings are mapped yet - shows location of buildings on this page.