Architects: Chamberlin, Powell, and Bon, 1973. The residential block comprises 178 flats and maisonettes, including 24 roof-top penthouses. Behind is a glimpse of the 44-storey Lauderdale Tower (1974). Photographed from the Lakeside Terrace, outside Level G of the Barbican Arts Centre. City of London.
Architects: Chamberlin, Powell, and Bon, 1976. Grade II listed tower of 44 storeys, along with the low-rise Defoe House (1973) and the Barbican Centre (1982). Barbican Estate, City of London.
Architects: Chamberlin, Powell and Bon, 1973. The tower was named after Oliver Cromwell and contains 108 flats along with 3 penthouse maisonettes. Foreground, left, is the glazed conservatory which wraps around the theatre flytower. Right is part of CPB's Speed House, the first residential block to be built on the Barbican Estate in 1969. City of London.
Left, detail of Prospect Place, Gehry Partners, 2022. Distance, left, St George Wharf tower, Broadway Malyan, 2014. Right, One Nine Elms, KPF, 2024. London Borough of Wandsworth.
London Transport Architects Department, 1977. Air vent for the Victoria line in a Brutalist style with vertically-ribbed concrete texture. London Borough of Lambeth.
Kohn Pederson Fox (KPF) Architects, 2024. 199m River Park Tower and 160m Park Hyatt London River Thames Residences tower. Also in view, the St George Wharf tower (Broadway Malyan, 2014). London Borough of Wandsworth.
HAL Architects 2021, with engineering by Eckersley O'Callaghan and fabrication by Reynolds Polymers. The acrylic structure measures 25 meters in length and 10 feet in depth, with a water weight estimated at 375 tonnes. Located in Nine Elms, within the London Borough of Wandsworth.
HAL Architects 2021, Eckersley O'Callaghan engineers, Reynolds Polymers fabrication. Acrylic, 25m long, 10ft deep, water weight said to be 375 tonnes. Nine Elms, London Borough of Wandsworth.
Originally designed by Leonard Pearce & Giles Gilbert Scott as a coal-fired electricity generating station. Built in the 1930s and extended in the 1950s. Now re-purposed as retail & residential (WilkinsonEyre). An observation elevator can be seen atop the northwest chimney. London Borough of Wandsworth.
Sculpture designed by WilkinsonEyre architects and fabricated by Littlehampton Welding Ltd (LWL), 2021. Galvanized steel, intended to represent the smoke plumes from the erstwhile power station's chimneys. London Borough of Wandsworth.
Artist: Mire Lee (b. Korea, 1988). Installation 'Open Wound' in the Tate Modern's turbine hall. Suspended, pink fabric 'skins' and the innards of a turbine. With gruesome dripping of pink liquid onto the floor of the hall. London Borough of Southwark.
Photo showing a sunlit, east aspect of Putney Bridge, which was designed by Joseph Bazalgette. Made of stone and Cornish granite, it opened 1886 for vehicle and pedestrian traffic. To the left is Putney Wharf Tower, the old International Computers Ltd building which was recycled into 67 residential apartments by Patel Taylor in 2004; as part of the refurbishment the front was given a new semi-circular steel-framed extension with glazed curtain walling and wraparound balconies. Viewed from the north bank of the Thames in the London Borough of Hammersmith & Fulham.
Designed by C.Botterill, Borough Surveyor, c.1900. Tudor-revival style with exposed oak timbers on upper exterior. London Borough of Hammersmith & Fulham.
Likely part of the decorations for a Christmas fair at Fulham Palace. The tree is located southeast of the walled garden in the London Borough of Hammersmith & Fulham.
Engineers: W.H.Thomas and William Jacomb, 1889, originally named Putney Railway Bridge. Carries District Line trains and also pedestrians. Wrought-iron lattice girder construction on 14 cast-iron cylinders, each 10 feet in diameter. Two rusticated granite and Portland stone abutments. [Source: Grace's Guide To British Industrial History]. Here seen from the north bank of the Thames in the London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham.
Modern take on a Christmas tree in Granary Square. Artist: Liz West (b.1985, UK). Aluminium, fluorescent vinyl, plywood, UV lamps, 1070cm x 360cm x 360cm, 2024. Behind, the Grade II listed Granary building, 1851-2, by Lewis Cubitt. London Borough of Camden.