strange death of England
Marks & Spencer corner
looking down Oxford Street
Bond Street station
inspiring street architecture
Oxford Circus station
Russell & Bromley building
Oxford Street architecture
bussing down Oxford Street
Tottenham Court ghost
has bin hollyhocks
a break at Queen Square
pink bear phone box
Sicilian Avenue
Bloomsbury Square bus stop
Southampton Place
streets of soulless glass
Tottenham Court ghost
Centre Point tube station
Centre Point development site
past the Cambridge
passing the Palace
passing the Queen's Theatre
buses round a statue
Cumberland Gate fountains
Hyde Park Hilton
Notting Hill
Holland Park houses
a terrible way to die
more nightmare architecture
Destiny
end of the No.17 bus
Kingston Road bus stop
rounding St Margaret's corner
The Ogston Music School
new carbuncle site
redevelopment behind Royal Oak
Mercy Burton
Midnight Owl
Kismet, North Wales
Barolo
Balmaha
Greenham Mist
Reflections
Coracle in the summer rain
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Marble Arch is a 19th-century white marble-faced triumphal arch and London landmark. The structure was designed by John Nash in 1827 to be the state entrance to the cour d'honneur of Buckingham Palace... In 1851 it was relocated and, following the widening of Park Lane in the early 1960s, is now sited, incongruently isolated, on a large traffic island...
A popular story says that the arch was moved because it was too narrow for the Queen's state coach to pass through, but, in fact, the gold state coach passed under it during Elizabeth II's coronation in 1953. Three small rooms inside the rebuilt arch were used as a police station from 1851 until at least 1968...
In 2005 it was speculated that the arch might be moved across the street to Hyde Park, or to a more accessible location than its current position on a large traffic island.
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