Lovat Lane street sign
looming over the city
Georgian shop in Eastcheap
St Margaret Pattens Church
St Mary at Hill clock
old with the ugly
old waterman's house
St Mary at Hill street
City of London bollard
St Mary at Hill street sign
St Magnus Martyr spire
tacky city signpost
Monument getting blocked in
Old Billingsgate Walk sign
Billingsgate weather vane
Billingsgate arches
Old Billingsgate Walk
Old Billingsgate Fish Market
bleak view across the Thames
dismal architecture blocks
Dark House Walk street sign
Old Watermen's Walk street sign
Grant's Quay Wharf street sign
Samuel Budgen rubber dept
down Lovat Lane
St Mary at Hill tower
door of St Mary at Hill
St Mary at Hill Church interior
St Mary at Hill ceiling
St Mary at Hill font
St Mary at Hill
window tax in Lovat Lane
up Lovat Lane
Botolph Alley street sign
Walrus and Carpenter pub sign
unaesthetic architecture
the Walrus & the Carpenter
Northern & Shell enormity
wet day at Billingsgate
Heritage Walk pavement sign
monument to lost London
monumental carbuncle
Monument Street sign
Fish Street Hill sign
St Magnus Martyr clock
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looming nightmare architecture


monster ugly buildings looming over the streets of London
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www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3170313/Down-draught-walkie-talkie-skyscraper-blowing-workers-over.html
It has singed shopfronts, melted cars and caused great gusts of wind to sweep pedestrians off their feet. Now the Walkie Talkie tower, the bulbous comedy villain of London’s skyline, has been bestowed with the Carbuncle Cup by Building Design (BD) magazine for the worst building of the year.
It looms thuggishly over its low-rise neighbours like a broad-shouldered banker in a cheap pinstriped suit.
From further east, its silhouette is reminiscent of a sanitary towel, flapping behind Tower Bridge. The headquarters of the Royal Institute of Town Planners stands two streets away. “It’s a daily reminder,” sighs one employee, “never to let such a planning disaster ever happen again.”
It is a challenge finding anyone who has something positive to say about this building,” says Carbuncle Cup jury chair and BD editor Thomas Lane. “The result is Londoners now have to suffer views of this bloated carbuncle crashing into London’s historic skyline like an unwelcome guest at a party from miles away.
www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2016/aug/27/londoners-back-skyscraper-limit-skyline
www.youtube.com/watch?v=6QcbsedsGdA
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