The Anonymous Widower

Shell Mex House and the Savoy Hotel

Shell Mex House has sat on the River Thames since 1930 and is one of the most recognisable buildings with its large clock.  It sits next to the Savoy Hotel, which looks very anonymous compared to its brash neighbour.

Shell Mex House and the Savoy Hotel

I only stayed in the hotel once and that was on my birthday in 1987. 

As happened several times in big hotels in those days, I got woken the middle of the night by a phone call.  It’s the trouble with having a common name and if the hotel has more than a hundred of so rooms, there’s a chance you have a namesake.  It doesn’t happen anymore, as we all have mobile phones and no-one ever rings the hotel and asks for a guest.

And then to make it worse!  I went for a walk in the morning and got hit in the eye by a stone thrown up by a passing vehicle.  When I returned to the hotel, they didn’t think I was a guest and tried to throw me out!

So I won’t stay there again.  But I suspect, if I did it would be a lot better, as that night was just bad luck!

Strangely, the only time I’ve been inside Shell Mex House was to meet a guy with the same name as me!

April 19, 2010 Posted by | World | , | Leave a comment

Lifeboats on the Thames

The Thames has several lifeboat stations operated by the RNLI.

Tower Lifeboat Station

This is the one at the Tower.  Or should I say it used to be on Tower Pier, but it has now been moved to by Waterloo Bridge. 

I’m sure this was where the River Police used to have their station. Wikipedia confirms that here.

April 19, 2010 Posted by | World | , | Leave a comment

Somerset House

The imposing building, that is Somerset House, has had many Government uses in recent years and I can remember going there to look up my birth certificate.

But to my wife it was her favourite court, as she appeared there many times in the Principal Registry of the Family Division.  It’s now in High Holborn, but she always said that it didn’t have the class of the old courts in Somerset House.

Somerset House

April 19, 2010 Posted by | World | , | Leave a comment

The Inns of Court

There are some things that no matter how many times you are told them, you never remember them.  For instance, I can never which Inn of Court my wife belonged to; Inner or Middle Temple.

She always moaned about the fact that provincial barristers got very little out of the Inns compared to those who lived and worked in London.

The Inns of Court

Behind the trees are some wonderful buildings and some of the most cramped offices you will find in London.

April 19, 2010 Posted by | World | , | Leave a comment

Thameslink Programme Construction

Thameslink Programme (or Thameslink 2000 as it was called!) is one of those rail construction projects that everybody says is very good and yet it has been delayed for years.

I can remember walking to a client around Borough High Street some years ago and there were lots of posters up saying that they didn’t want it.  Did they delay it?  Probably not, but the Treasury likes any reason for delay as that means they don’t have to spend the money.

But at least now you can see that construction has started.

Blackfriars Station Under Construction

As we passed under the bridge, you can get a view of the remains of the second of the two railway bridges at Blackfriars. It is the older of the two bridges having been built in 1864 and there is still a lovely crest on the South Bank of the Thames.

The Old Blackfriars Railway Bridge

The redundant pillars left when the bridge was demolished in 1985 are to be used to support part of the new Blackfriars station that will be over the river. There will also be a station entrance on the South Bank.

You can read more about the Thameslink Programme at the official site.

It looks like it will be worth all the money they are spending.

April 19, 2010 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , | Leave a comment

The Millennium Bridge

Commonly known as the Wobbly Bridge, the Millennium Bridge links St. Paul’s Cathedral to the Tate Modern.

The Millennium Bridge, London

I’ve used this bridge many times. 

Note that as you get to St. Paul’s you’ll find the National Firefighters Memorial. This is fitting as it was originally a memorial to Second World War firemen and was later expanded for all firefighters.

I say fitting, as if ever there was a symbol of London in the Blitz, it is the amazing photograph of the cathedral surrounded in smoke, defiantly above the flames.

April 19, 2010 Posted by | World | , | Leave a comment

Cannon Street Station

When I was growing up, Cannon Street station was just a shell.

Cannon Street Station

Now it has an office block cradled in its arms.

I hadn’t realised until I read the Wikipedia entry for the station, that the development of the station was involved ion one of the worst corruption scandals of the 1960s; the Poulson affair.

The architect selected to design the new building was John Poulson who was good friends with Graham Tunbridge, a British Rail surveyor whom he had met during the war. Poulson took advantage of this friendship to win contracts for the redevelopment of various British Rail termini. He paid Tunbridge a weekly income of £25 and received in return building contracts, including the rebuilding of London Waterloo and East Croydon. At his trial in 1974 he admitted that shortly before receiving the Cannon Street building contract, he had given Tunbridge a cheque for £200 and a suit worth £80. Poulson was later found guilty of corruption charges and was given a seven-year concurrent sentence; Tunbridge received a 15-month suspended sentence and £4,000 fine for his role in the affair.

Those were the days!

April 19, 2010 Posted by | Transport/Travel, World | , | Leave a comment

The Tower of London

The Tower is partially under wraps at present.

The Tower of London

Strangely, I’ve only visited the Tower once.  And that was when I showed a fellow student from Liverpool around London.

April 19, 2010 Posted by | World | | Leave a comment

The New, the Venerable Rowing Club and the Curious

I took this picture of Poplar Rowing Club with Canary Wharf in the background.

Poplar Rowing Club

The rowing club is the third oldest in Britain and dates from 1845.

But what is the round building on the right?

It’s one of the entries to the Greenwich Foot Tunnel.

That incidentally is about sixty years younger than the rowing club.

April 19, 2010 Posted by | Sport, World | , , | Leave a comment

The O2 Arena

The O2 Arena dominates the River Thames.

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I’ve only been to the Dome once, whilst it still had the millennium exhibition.  It was a great building full of total crap.

April 19, 2010 Posted by | World | , | Leave a comment