Area photos


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(51.53003 -0.0809, 51.53 -0.08) 


LOCAL PHOTOS
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St Lukes Hospital for Lunatics, London
TUM image id: 1554045418
Licence: CC BY 2.0
Bloom Court, Blossom Street (1956)
TUM image id: 1574858373
Licence: CC BY 2.0

In the neighbourhood...

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Geffrye Museum, London (2012)
Credit: Chang Yisheng
Licence: CC BY 2.0


Colville Estate, Shoreditch (2019) The Colville Estate is situated between the Regents Canal to the North and Shoreditch Park to the South. It was designed in the early 1950s by Shoreditch Metropolitan Borough Council and since 2009 has undergone ’regeneration’.
Credit: Municipal Dreams
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Mass grave for plague victims, Holywell Mount (1665) Holywell Mount is the source of the River Walbrook. Today it lies underneath Luke Street in Shoreditch but, then in open land, was used as a plague pit in 1665.
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Crondall Street is one of the older streets of the Somers Town area. As Gloucester Street it had already appeared on Rocque’s 1750s map. By the time of the 1830 map, New Gloucester Street extended it westwards. The NW1 area has many other examples of this building style.
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View of Curtain Road, Shoreditch from the corner of Great Eastern Street (1896)
Credit: George Newnes
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Butcher, Hoxton St, Shoreditch (c.1910)
Credit: Bishopsgate Institute
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On King John Court, E1 is a huge painted mural covering an office building - in 2018 the largest street art mural in the UK. The artwork was created by 16 artists using 250 litres of black paint and 500 cans of spray paint. It covers 1400 square metres of the London headquarters of telecommunications company Colt, who commissioned the piece through Global Street Art.
Credit: https://careergappers.com/
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Pitfield Street (1896)
Old London postcard
Licence: CC BY 2.0


William Brandon and his mineral water business, 112 Virginia Road, Bethnal Green c.1887
Credit: the gentle author
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Ely Place dates from the 1860s but the name dates from 1669. On 11 November 1651, property owner Thomas Robinson sold a portion of his land to one Francis Kirkman. It was described as a "parcel of ground 34 feet wide and from 74 to 84 feet long (...) and the entry way from Hoxton Street between the houses, and a garden plot of one acre extending eastwards to Kingsland Highway". In 1665, the Joiners’ Company purchased an estate at Hoxton and in 1669, sold it on to the overseers of the poor of the Liberty of Saffron Hill, Hatton Garden and Ely Rents. This forms the basis for Ely Place and the land to its north (part of which was developed into the Shoreditch Workhouse). Obliterated during Second World War bombing, 1974 saw an area including Lynedoch Street and Ely Place redeveloped.
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