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  • An original Victorian shopping arcade in the seaside resort town of Great Yarmouth on the English east coast. Daylight floods in through overhead skylight roof glass  as shoppers walk past local ladies fashion displays seen behind beautiful curved windows, in the style of late 19th century. Tiles flooring acts as a pavement to resembled an upper-class covered street to keep visitors dry from frequent coastal showers. The shops are local too - without branded chains occupying the site and forcing hardship on local businesses.
    victorian_arcade01-01-07-1992.jpg
  • The inscription 'In Memoriam' is written at the base of a statue artwork located in the Victorian cemetery at Nunhead in south London, on 1st march 2020, in London, England. Nunhead is of the great Victorian Cemeteries of London. Consecrated in 1840, it is one of the seven great Victorian cemeteries established in a ring around the outskirts of London, its 52-acre site near Peckham is the final resting place for many members of Victorian society: From music hall artists, inventors, WW1, and soldiers who survived the battles of Waterloo and Trafalgar.
    in_memoriam-02-01-03-2020.jpg
  • The inscription 'In Memoriam' is written at the base of a statue artwork located in the Victorian cemetery at Nunhead in south London, on 1st march 2020, in London, England. Nunhead is of the great Victorian Cemeteries of London. Consecrated in 1840, it is one of the seven great Victorian cemeteries established in a ring around the outskirts of London, its 52-acre site near Peckham is the final resting place for many members of Victorian society: From music hall artists, inventors, WW1, and soldiers who survived the battles of Waterloo and Trafalgar.
    in_memoriam-01-01-03-2020.jpg
  • A male visitor sleeps with his head back while sitting in front of Victorian graves and memorials in south London's in south London's Nunhead Cemetery, on 1st march 2020, in London, England. Nunhead is of the great Victorian Cemeteries of London. Consecrated in 1840, it is one of the seven great Victorian cemeteries established in a ring around the outskirts of London, its 52-acre site near Peckham is the final resting place for many members of Victorian society: From music hall artists, inventors, WW1, and soldiers who survived the battles of Waterloo and Trafalgar.
    nunhead_cemetery-01-01-03-2020.jpg
  • A detail of an ornate Victorian brass letter box plate. Seen in close-up, the single and plural word 'Letters' is printed in upper-case capitals on the flap that one must lift to insert postal mail from the outside of this heavy, glossy black doors in the seaside town of Lowestoft in Suffolk, England. The brass plate sits in its fitted slot and has been carefully polished these last decades to ensure it still looks as handsome as it might have some time in the Victorian era when brass door knockers and other elaborate fittings were fixed to houses, showing true quality craftsmanship - a factor largely ignored in the mass-produced products of today.
    letter_box06-12-1992_1.jpg
  • Seen from the Barmouth Bridge is Coes-Faen Spa Lodge, a former Victorian residence on the Mawddach estuary, on 13th September 2018, in Barmouth, Gwynedd, Wales. Coes Faen Lodge dates back to around 1865 and was built by the Lowe brothers, mill owners from the West Midlands, in the late 1800s, when the railway first came to the area and started the transformation of Barmouth (Abermaw) from a shipbuilding, fishing and trading rural community to a Victorian seaside resort destination.
    coes_faen-03-13-09-2018.jpg
  • Seen from the Barmouth Bridge is Coes-Faen Spa Lodge, a former Victorian residence on the Mawddach estuary, on 13th September 2018, in Barmouth, Gwynedd, Wales. Coes Faen Lodge dates back to around 1865 and was built by the Lowe brothers, mill owners from the West Midlands, in the late 1800s, when the railway first came to the area and started the transformation of Barmouth (Abermaw) from a shipbuilding, fishing and trading rural community to a Victorian seaside resort destination.
    coes_faen-02-13-09-2018.jpg
  • Seen from the Barmouth Bridge is Coes-Faen Spa Lodge, a former Victorian residence on the Mawddach estuary, on 13th September 2018, in Barmouth, Gwynedd, Wales. Coes Faen Lodge dates back to around 1865 and was built by the Lowe brothers, mill owners from the West Midlands, in the late 1800s, when the railway first came to the area and started the transformation of Barmouth (Abermaw) from a shipbuilding, fishing and trading rural community to a Victorian seaside resort destination.
    coes_faen-01-13-09-2018.jpg
  • A detail of an ornate Victorian brass letter box plate. Seen in close-up, the single and plural word 'Letters' is printed in upper-case capitals on the flap that one must lift to insert postal mail from the outside of this heavy, glossy black doors in the seaside town of Lowestoft in Suffolk, England. The brass plate sits in its fitted slot and has been carefully polished these last decades to ensure it still looks as handsome as it might have some time in the Victorian era when brass door knockers and other elaborate fittings were fixed to houses, showing true quality craftsmanship - a factor largely ignored in the mass-produced products of today.
    brass_door-12-06-1992.jpg
  • Pedestrians walk beneath the Gothic arches of the Royal Courts of Justice on the Strand, on 11th march 2020, in London, England. Designed by George Edmund Street, who died before it was completed, it is a large grey stone edifice in the Victorian Gothic style built in the 1870s and opened by Queen Victoria in 1882. It is one of the largest courts in Europe.
    law_courts-01-11-03-2020.jpg
  • A lady stoops to fetch something from her bag at a temporary construction hoarding beneath the partially hidden statue of Eros, the world famous London Victorian-era landmark, Eros in Piccadilly Circus, on 25th February 2020, in London, England. Eros, or the Shaftesbury Memorial Fountain is located at the southeastern side of Piccadilly Circus in London, United Kingdom. Moved after World War II from its original position in the centre, it was erected in 1892–1893 to commemorate the philanthropic works of Lord Shaftesbury, who was a famous Victorian politician and philanthropist. The monument is surmounted by Alfred Gilbert's winged nude statue generally, though mistakenly, known as Eros. This has been called "London's most famous work of sculpture."
    piccadilly_eros-09-25-02-2020.jpg
  • Victorian stairwell architecture leading to flats in Edinburgh, on 25th June 2019, in Edinburgh, Scotland.
    edinburgh-20-25-06-2019.jpg
  • Exterior of the Victorian Methodist chapel in Reedham, a small village on the Norfolk Broads.
    norfolk_chapel03-29-07-2013.jpg
  • A poorly maintained red door with the number 48 of an old Victorian property in the north London district of Kings Cross. This area of north London is a across the road from the mainline station where European visitors arrive on the Eurostar from mainland Europe and the King Cross area is set for more redevelopment so the future for this original architecture is uncertain.
    red_door01-28-02-2013.jpg
  • A bright, new blue office chair incongruously left in a street with stained Victorian brickwork of a tunnel, in the London district of Clerkenwell. Set against the poverty of the road arch brick, we see contemporary modern office furniture and a previous 19th century era.
    blue_chair02-28-02-2013.jpg
  • A bright, new blue office chair incongruously left in a street with stained Victorian brickwork of a tunnel, in the London district of Clerkenwell. Set against the poverty of the road arch brick, we see contemporary modern office furniture and a previous 19th century era.
    blue_chair01-28-02-2013.jpg
  • Giant circle painted on the side wall of a Victorian terraced home in a south London street.
    circle_wall04-20-04-2012.jpg
  • Giant circle painted on the side wall of a Victorian terraced home in south London.
    circle_wall01-20-04-2012.jpg
  • A derelict Victorian house boarded-up with similar patterns to that of blanked off windows and door pediment.
    abandoned_housing02-12-04-2012.jpg
  • Pedestrians point towards a London site next to a temporary construction hoarding beneath the partially hidden statue of the world famous London Victorian-era landmark, Eros in Piccadilly Circus, on 25th February 2020, in London, England. Eros, or the Shaftesbury Memorial Fountain is located at the southeastern side of Piccadilly Circus in London, United Kingdom. Moved after World War II from its original position in the centre, it was erected in 1892–1893 to commemorate the philanthropic works of Lord Shaftesbury, who was a famous Victorian politician and philanthropist. The monument is surmounted by Alfred Gilbert's winged nude statue generally, though mistakenly, known as Eros. This has been called "London's most famous work of sculpture."
    piccadilly_eros-07-25-02-2020.jpg
  • A pigeon takes off from approaching pedestrians next to a temporary construction hoarding beneath the partially hidden statue of the world famous London Victorian-era landmark, Eros in Piccadilly Circus, on 25th February 2020, in London, England. Eros, or the Shaftesbury Memorial Fountain is located at the southeastern side of Piccadilly Circus in London, United Kingdom. Moved after World War II from its original position in the centre, it was erected in 1892–1893 to commemorate the philanthropic works of Lord Shaftesbury, who was a famous Victorian politician and philanthropist. The monument is surmounted by Alfred Gilbert's winged nude statue generally, though mistakenly, known as Eros. This has been called "London's most famous work of sculpture."
    piccadilly_eros-06-25-02-2020.jpg
  • A pedestrian points towards a London site next to a temporary construction hoarding beneath the partially hidden statue of the world famous London Victorian-era landmark, Eros in Piccadilly Circus, on 25th February 2020, in London, England. Eros, or the Shaftesbury Memorial Fountain is located at the southeastern side of Piccadilly Circus in London, United Kingdom. Moved after World War II from its original position in the centre, it was erected in 1892–1893 to commemorate the philanthropic works of Lord Shaftesbury, who was a famous Victorian politician and philanthropist. The monument is surmounted by Alfred Gilbert's winged nude statue generally, though mistakenly, known as Eros. This has been called "London's most famous work of sculpture."
    piccadilly_eros-05-25-02-2020.jpg
  • A pedestrian points towards a London site next to a temporary construction hoarding beneath the partially hidden statue of the world famous London Victorian-era landmark, Eros in Piccadilly Circus, on 25th February 2020, in London, England. Eros, or the Shaftesbury Memorial Fountain is located at the southeastern side of Piccadilly Circus in London, United Kingdom. Moved after World War II from its original position in the centre, it was erected in 1892–1893 to commemorate the philanthropic works of Lord Shaftesbury, who was a famous Victorian politician and philanthropist. The monument is surmounted by Alfred Gilbert's winged nude statue generally, though mistakenly, known as Eros. This has been called "London's most famous work of sculpture."
    piccadilly_eros-04-25-02-2020.jpg
  • A couple walk past a temporary construction hoarding beneath the partially hidden statue of the world famous London Victorian-era landmark, Eros in Piccadilly Circus, on 25th February 2020, in London, England. Eros, or the Shaftesbury Memorial Fountain is located at the southeastern side of Piccadilly Circus in London, United Kingdom. Moved after World War II from its original position in the centre, it was erected in 1892–1893 to commemorate the philanthropic works of Lord Shaftesbury, who was a famous Victorian politician and philanthropist. The monument is surmounted by Alfred Gilbert's winged nude statue generally, though mistakenly, known as Eros. This has been called "London's most famous work of sculpture."
    piccadilly_eros-03-25-02-2020.jpg
  • A two direction sign for pedestrians leans against a temporary construction hoarding, beneath the partially hidden statue of the world famous London Victorian-era landmark, Eros in Piccadilly Circus, on 25th February 2020, in London, England. Eros, or the Shaftesbury Memorial Fountain is located at the southeastern side of Piccadilly Circus in London, United Kingdom. Moved after World War II from its original position in the centre, it was erected in 1892–1893 to commemorate the philanthropic works of Lord Shaftesbury, who was a famous Victorian politician and philanthropist. The monument is surmounted by Alfred Gilbert's winged nude statue generally, though mistakenly, known as Eros. This has been called "London's most famous work of sculpture."
    piccadilly_eros-02-25-02-2020.jpg
  • An elderly couple walk past a temporary construction hoarding beneath the partially hidden statue of the world famous London Victorian-era landmark, Eros in Piccadilly Circus, on 25th February 2020, in London, England. Eros, or the Shaftesbury Memorial Fountain is located at the southeastern side of Piccadilly Circus in London, United Kingdom. Moved after World War II from its original position in the centre, it was erected in 1892–1893 to commemorate the philanthropic works of Lord Shaftesbury, who was a famous Victorian politician and philanthropist. The monument is surmounted by Alfred Gilbert's winged nude statue generally, though mistakenly, known as Eros. This has been called "London's most famous work of sculpture."
    piccadilly_eros-01-25-02-2020.jpg
  • Worn Victorian steps and terraced housing on Teviotdale Place alongside the Waters of Leith, in Edinburgh, on 26th June 2019, in Edinburgh, Scotland.
    edinburgh-38-26-06-2019.jpg
  • Worn Victorian steps and terraced housing on Teviotdale Place alongside the Waters of Leith, in Edinburgh, on 26th June 2019, in Edinburgh, Scotland.
    edinburgh-37-26-06-2019.jpg
  • Victorian stairwell architecture leading to flats in Edinburgh, on 25th June 2019, in Edinburgh, Scotland.
    edinburgh-19-25-06-2019.jpg
  • A former south London pub once called The British Queen dating to the Victorian era but now closed and awaiting sale, on 4th January, London borough of Southwark, England. British pubs have been closing at a rate of 27 a week, says the Campaign for Real Ale (Camra). There were 52,750 pubs at the end of last year, down from 54,194 in December 2014.
    closed_pub-02-04-01-2017.jpg
  • A former south London pub once called The British Queen dating to the Victorian era but now closed and awaiting sale, on 4th January, London borough of Southwark, England. British pubs have been closing at a rate of 27 a week, says the Campaign for Real Ale (Camra). There were 52,750 pubs at the end of last year, down from 54,194 in December 2014.
    closed_pub-03-04-01-2017.jpg
  • A former south London pub once called The British Queen dating to the Victorian era but now closed and awaiting sale, on 4th January, London borough of Southwark, England. British pubs have been closing at a rate of 27 a week, says the Campaign for Real Ale (Camra). There were 52,750 pubs at the end of last year, down from 54,194 in December 2014.
    closed_pub-01-04-01-2017.jpg
  • Decaying Victorian brick wall and present-day graffiti in London's east end.
    graffiti_wall01-17-11-2000.jpg
  • A Victorian water tower scructure provides a habitat for wildlife in a Herefordshire wooded garden.
    forest_tower01-25-08-2013.jpg
  • A poorly maintained red door with the number 48 of an old Victorian property in the north London district of Kings Cross. This area of north London is a across the road from the mainline station where European visitors arrive on the Eurostar from mainland Europe and the King Cross area is set for more redevelopment so the future for this original architecture is uncertain.
    red_door02-28-02-2013.jpg
  • Giant circle painted on the side wall of a Victorian terraced home in south London.
    circle_wall02-20-04-2012.jpg
  • Car wheel and giant circle painted on the side wall of a Victorian terraced home in south London.
    circle_wall03-20-04-2012.jpg
  • Victorian housing seen from Brockwell Park, Herne Hill, South London.
    london_housing03-15-11-2010.jpg
  • Red Victorian rural post box o mounted at dry stone wall in Vale of Edale, Peak District National Park, Derbyshire.
    post_box03-02-06-2010.jpg
  • An adult points out a London site next to a temporary construction hoarding beneath the partially hidden statue of the world famous London Victorian-era landmark, Eros in Piccadilly Circus, on 25th February 2020, in London, England. Eros, or the Shaftesbury Memorial Fountain is located at the southeastern side of Piccadilly Circus in London, United Kingdom. Moved after World War II from its original position in the centre, it was erected in 1892–1893 to commemorate the philanthropic works of Lord Shaftesbury, who was a famous Victorian politician and philanthropist. The monument is surmounted by Alfred Gilbert's winged nude statue generally, though mistakenly, known as Eros. This has been called "London's most famous work of sculpture."
    piccadilly_eros-08-25-02-2020.jpg
  • A detail of a Victorian house gable in the Essex seaside town of Frinton-on-Sea. Ornate blue painted woodwork looks fresh and clean despite it being 100 years old. The name of the property reads as Essex House and the date of its construction as 1896. A gable is the generally triangular portion of a wall between the edges of a sloping roof. The shape of the gable and how it is detailed depends on the structural system used (which is often related to climate and availability of materials) and aesthetic concerns. Thus the type of roof enclosing the volume dictates the shape of the gable. A gable wall or gable end more commonly refers to the entire wall, including the gable and the wall below it.
    essex_house01-12-06-1992.jpg
  • Exterior of the Victorian Methodist chapel in Reedham, a small village on the Norfolk Broads.
    norfolk_chapel01-29-07-2013.jpg
  • A woodland landscape of the iron Bridge that spans the former Victorian railway line that took visitors to Crystal Palace, in Sydenham Hill Woods, on 30th October 2020, in London, England. The Nunhead to Crystal Palace (High Level) railway once passed through the Wood, and the track bed can be followed to a disused and closed tunnel which is now a registered bat roost.
    sydenham_wood-3-30-10-2022.jpg
  • A woodland landscape of the iron Bridge that spans the former Victorian railway line that took visitors to Crystal Palace, in Sydenham Hill Woods, on 30th October 2020, in London, England. The Nunhead to Crystal Palace (High Level) railway once passed through the Wood, and the track bed can be followed to a disused and closed tunnel which is now a registered bat roost.
    sydenham_wood-2-30-10-2022.jpg
  • A contract cleaner wipes the surfaces of the statue to Victorian philanthropist entrepreneur and banker George Peabody (1795 to 1869), in the City of London, on 31st January 2022, in London, England.
    city_russians-133-31-01-2022.jpg
  • The design on the rear doors of a bespoke window company's van and Victorian houses along Elgin Crescent W11 in Notting Hill, on 13th March 2018, in London, England. Elgin Crescent's houses were built in the 1850s and 1860s with many now listed buildings. East of Ladbroke Grove, it was originally called Elgin Road. It is named after the town of Elgin in Scotland.
    holland_park-22-13-03-2018.jpg
  • Victorian bakery/cafe on the corner of Roupell Street, Waterloo, south London.
    waterloo_cafe01-15-05-2015.jpg
  • A conservator with City of London contractor Rupert Harris Conservation, uses a pressure jet spray to hose off the statue of Victorian philanthropist, entrepreneur and banker George Peabody (1795 to 1869). As part of a rolling programme of maintenance and cleaning by the Square Mile's governing Corporation, historic items - from statues and plaques to other pieces of historic value are regularly attended to.
    statue_cleaning05-09-02-2015.jpg
  • Former Victorian park-keepers house in Dulwich Park, south London during mid-winter snow.
    dulwich_snow05-21-01-2013.jpg
  • Statue of Sir George Peabody near overflowing litter bin and City of London urban Victorian landscape.
    peabody_statue01-19-03-2012.jpg
  • A half-bricked up and painted Victorian terraced house window.
    brick_window02-11-01-2012.jpg
  • A woodland landscape of the iron Bridge that spans the former Victorian railway line that took visitors to Crystal Palace, in Sydenham Hill Woods, on 25th October 2020, in London, England. The Nunhead to Crystal Palace (High Level) railway once passed through the Wood, and the track bed can be followed to a disused and closed tunnel which is now a registered bat roost.
    sydenham_wood02-25-10-2020.jpg
  • A woodland landscape of the iron Bridge that spans the former Victorian railway line that took visitors to Crystal Palace, in Sydenham Hill Woods, on 25th October 2020, in London, England. The Nunhead to Crystal Palace (High Level) railway once passed through the Wood, and the track bed can be followed to a disused and closed tunnel which is now a registered bat roost.
    sydenham_wood01-25-10-2020.jpg
  • An old belisha beacon and small Mini Cab business landscape at a crossing beneath one of the many Victorian bridges near Waterloo mainline station, on 2nd May 2019, in London, England.
    waterloo_landscape-02-02-05-2019.jpg
  • An old belisha beacon and small Mini Cab business landscape at a crossing beneath one of the many Victorian bridges near Waterloo mainline station, on 2nd May 2019, in London, England.
    waterloo_landscape-01-02-05-2019.jpg
  • The design on the rear doors of a bespoke window company's van and Victorian houses along Elgin Crescent W11 in Notting Hill, on 13th March 2018, in London, England. Elgin Crescent's houses were built in the 1850s and 1860s with many now listed buildings. East of Ladbroke Grove, it was originally called Elgin Road. It is named after the town of Elgin in Scotland.
    holland_park-26-13-03-2018.jpg
  • The design on the rear doors of a bespoke window company's van and Victorian houses along Elgin Crescent W11 in Notting Hill, on 13th March 2018, in London, England. Elgin Crescent's houses were built in the 1850s and 1860s with many now listed buildings. East of Ladbroke Grove, it was originally called Elgin Road. It is named after the town of Elgin in Scotland.
    holland_park-25-13-03-2018.jpg
  • The design on the rear doors of a bespoke window company's van and Victorian houses along Elgin Crescent W11 in Notting Hill, on 13th March 2018, in London, England. Elgin Crescent's houses were built in the 1850s and 1860s with many now listed buildings. East of Ladbroke Grove, it was originally called Elgin Road. It is named after the town of Elgin in Scotland.
    holland_park-24-13-03-2018.jpg
  • The design on the rear doors of a bespoke window company's van and Victorian houses along Elgin Crescent W11 in Notting Hill, on 13th March 2018, in London, England. Elgin Crescent's houses were built in the 1850s and 1860s with many now listed buildings. East of Ladbroke Grove, it was originally called Elgin Road. It is named after the town of Elgin in Scotland.
    holland_park-23-13-03-2018.jpg
  • The design on the rear doors of a bespoke window company's van and Victorian houses along Elgin Crescent W11 in Notting Hill, on 13th March 2018, in London, England. Elgin Crescent's houses were built in the 1850s and 1860s with many now listed buildings. East of Ladbroke Grove, it was originally called Elgin Road. It is named after the town of Elgin in Scotland.
    holland_park-21-13-03-2018.jpg
  • The design on the rear doors of a bespoke window company's van and Victorian houses along Elgin Crescent W11 in Notting Hill, on 13th March 2018, in London, England. Elgin Crescent's houses were built in the 1850s and 1860s with many now listed buildings. East of Ladbroke Grove, it was originally called Elgin Road. It is named after the town of Elgin in Scotland.
    holland_park-18-13-03-2018.jpg
  • The design on the rear doors of a bespoke window company's van and Victorian houses along Elgin Crescent W11 in Notting Hill, on 13th March 2018, in London, England. Elgin Crescent's houses were built in the 1850s and 1860s with many now listed buildings. East of Ladbroke Grove, it was originally called Elgin Road. It is named after the town of Elgin in Scotland.
    holland_park-19-13-03-2018.jpg
  • New apartment homes rise above a Victorian railway bridge in Southwark, on 13th November 2017, in London, England.
    southwark_bridge-01-13-11-2017.jpg
  • The Victorian letter posting box outside the local shop and post office in the Northumbrian village of Blanchland, on 29th September 2017, in Blanchland, Northumberland, England. Blanchland is a village in Northumberland, England, on the County Durham boundary. The population of the Civil Parish at the 2011 census was 135. Blanchland was formed out of the medieval Blanchland Abbey property by Nathaniel Crew, 3rd Baron Crew, the Bishop of Durham, 1674-1722. It is a conservation village, largely built of stone from the remains of the 12th-century Abbey. It features picturesque houses, set against a backdrop of deep woods and open moors. Set beside the river in a wooded section of the Derwent valley, Blanchland is an attractive small village in the North Pennines Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.
    blanchland-08-29-09-2017.jpg
  • The staircase of 2 Temple Place, on 17th September 2017, in London, England. The main staircase rises up from the Staircase Hall to the Gallery on the first floor. The staircase has seven mahogany carvings by Thomas Nicholls on the newel posts, these representing characters from Alexandre Dumas’s The Three Musketeers. As an example of a late Victorian mansion, it was built for William Waldorf Astor primarily as his state office by one of the foremost neo-Gothic architects of the late nineteenth-century, John Loughborough Pearson. Astor had emigrated to England in 1891 as arguably, the richest man in the world and no expense was spared when work began on Two Temple Place in 1892. Today, the building is owned by the Bulldog Trust and supports the charitable activities of the Trust through exhibitions and events hosted in the building.
    temple_place-08-17-09-2017.jpg
  • The staircase of 2 Temple Place, on 17th September 2017, in London, England. The main staircase rises up from the Staircase Hall to the Gallery on the first floor. The staircase has seven mahogany carvings by Thomas Nicholls on the newel posts, these representing characters from Alexandre Dumas’s The Three Musketeers. As an example of a late Victorian mansion, it was built for William Waldorf Astor primarily as his state office by one of the foremost neo-Gothic architects of the late nineteenth-century, John Loughborough Pearson. Astor had emigrated to England in 1891 as arguably, the richest man in the world and no expense was spared when work began on Two Temple Place in 1892. Today, the building is owned by the Bulldog Trust and supports the charitable activities of the Trust through exhibitions and events hosted in the building.
    temple_place-07-17-09-2017.jpg
  • The staircase of 2 Temple Place, on 17th September 2017, in London, England. The main staircase rises up from the Staircase Hall to the Gallery on the first floor. The staircase has seven mahogany carvings by Thomas Nicholls on the newel posts, these representing characters from Alexandre Dumas’s The Three Musketeers. As an example of a late Victorian mansion, it was built for William Waldorf Astor primarily as his state office by one of the foremost neo-Gothic architects of the late nineteenth-century, John Loughborough Pearson. Astor had emigrated to England in 1891 as arguably, the richest man in the world and no expense was spared when work began on Two Temple Place in 1892. Today, the building is owned by the Bulldog Trust and supports the charitable activities of the Trust through exhibitions and events hosted in the building.
    temple_place-06-17-09-2017.jpg
  • The staircase of 2 Temple Place, on 17th September 2017, in London, England. The main staircase rises up from the Staircase Hall to the Gallery on the first floor. The staircase has seven mahogany carvings by Thomas Nicholls on the newel posts, these representing characters from Alexandre Dumas’s The Three Musketeers. As an example of a late Victorian mansion, it was built for William Waldorf Astor primarily as his state office by one of the foremost neo-Gothic architects of the late nineteenth-century, John Loughborough Pearson. Astor had emigrated to England in 1891 as arguably, the richest man in the world and no expense was spared when work began on Two Temple Place in 1892. Today, the building is owned by the Bulldog Trust and supports the charitable activities of the Trust through exhibitions and events hosted in the building.
    temple_place-05-17-09-2017.jpg
  • Glass windows (not stained glass) in the Great Hall of 2 Temple Place, on 17th September 2017, in London, England. As an example of a late Victorian mansion, it was built for William Waldorf Astor primarily as his state office by one of the foremost neo-Gothic architects of the late nineteenth-century, John Loughborough Pearson. Astor had emigrated to England in 1891 as arguably, the richest man in the world and no expense was spared when work began on Two Temple Place in 1892. Today, the building is owned by the Bulldog Trust and supports the charitable activities of the Trust through exhibitions and events hosted in the building.
    temple_place-04-17-09-2017.jpg
  • Glass windows (not stained glass) in the Great Hall of 2 Temple Place, on 17th September 2017, in London, England. As an example of a late Victorian mansion, it was built for William Waldorf Astor primarily as his state office by one of the foremost neo-Gothic architects of the late nineteenth-century, John Loughborough Pearson. Astor had emigrated to England in 1891 as arguably, the richest man in the world and no expense was spared when work began on Two Temple Place in 1892. Today, the building is owned by the Bulldog Trust and supports the charitable activities of the Trust through exhibitions and events hosted in the building.
    temple_place-03-17-09-2017.jpg
  • Glass windows (not stained glass) in the Great Hall of 2 Temple Place, on 17th September 2017, in London, England. As an example of a late Victorian mansion, it was built for William Waldorf Astor primarily as his state office by one of the foremost neo-Gothic architects of the late nineteenth-century, John Loughborough Pearson. Astor had emigrated to England in 1891 as arguably, the richest man in the world and no expense was spared when work began on Two Temple Place in 1892. Today, the building is owned by the Bulldog Trust and supports the charitable activities of the Trust through exhibitions and events hosted in the building.
    temple_place-02-17-09-2017.jpg
  • Glass windows (not stained glass) in the Great Hall of 2 Temple Place, on 17th September 2017, in London, England. As an example of a late Victorian mansion, it was built for William Waldorf Astor primarily as his state office by one of the foremost neo-Gothic architects of the late nineteenth-century, John Loughborough Pearson. Astor had emigrated to England in 1891 as arguably, the richest man in the world and no expense was spared when work began on Two Temple Place in 1892. Today, the building is owned by the Bulldog Trust and supports the charitable activities of the Trust through exhibitions and events hosted in the building.
    temple_place-01-17-09-2017.jpg
  • Typical Victorian architecture of a house in Clevedon, on 22nd April 2017, in North Somerset, England.
    clevedon_house-01-22-04-2017.jpg
  • Ironwork and clock hanging from the roof of Smithfield meat and poultry market in Clerkenwell, London. Smithfield Market, a Grade II listed-covered market building, was designed by Victorian architect Sir Horace Jones, completed in November 1868 at a cost of £993,816 (£80 million at 2015 prices).
    smithfield_clock02-12-11-2015.jpg
  • Ironwork and clock hanging from the roof of Smithfield meat and poultry market in Clerkenwell, London. Smithfield Market, a Grade II listed-covered market building, was designed by Victorian architect Sir Horace Jones, completed in November 1868 at a cost of £993,816 (£80 million at 2015 prices).
    smithfield_clock01-12-11-2015.jpg
  • A conservator with City of London contractor Rupert Harris Conservation, uses a pressure jet spray to hose off the statue of Victorian philanthropist, entrepreneur and banker George Peabody (1795 to 1869). As part of a rolling programme of maintenance and cleaning by the Square Mile's governing Corporation, historic items - from statues and plaques to other pieces of historic value are regularly attended to.
    statue_cleaning06-09-02-2015.jpg
  • A conservator with City of London contractor Rupert Harris Conservation, washes off soap solution from the statue of Victorian philanthropist, entrepreneur and banker George Peabody (1795 to 1869). As part of a rolling programme of maintenance and cleaning by the Square Mile's governing Corporation, historic items - from statues and plaques to other pieces of historic value are regularly attended to.
    statue_cleaning04-09-02-2015.jpg
  • A lady sits outside in morning sunshine on the terrace of her B+B guesthouse in the Devon seaside town of Paignton. It is late morning and a lady has emerged from her bead and breakfast. Sunlight is quite high in the sky and the shadows of a vine that is growing across the roof of the building's terrace, is seen on the wall behind the woman. She is seated reading a magazine in a garden chair and is surrounded by colourful flowers in their prime. Well-painted original victorian railings that act as a sort of ballustrade are in front of the female. In the window is a scene of typical seaside Englishness. Serviettes are splayed out on a table along with breakfast or dinner items awaiting guests at the next meal.
    b+b_woman-21-07-1992.jpg
  • Ornate iron gates of the original New Scotland Yard, headquarters of London's Metropolitan Police at 4 Whitehall Place. The buildings are in banded red brick and white portland stone on a granite base in the Victorian Gothic style, and are located upon Victoria Embankment next-door to Portcullis House. The North Building is Grade I listed. It was designed in 1887.
    scotland_yard02-27-01-2013.jpg
  • A blurred cat walks past the rotting front door of a Victorian terraced house now dilapidated and abandoned on the streets of Toxteth. Toxteth is an inner-city area of Liverpool, Merseyside. It is located to the south of the city and is synonymous with social issues, degradation and poverty with some of the most underprivileged families in the UK. Recently many streets in the worst areas have been demolished including Beatle Ringo Starr's childhood home.
    liverpool_dereliction01-08-08-1991.jpg
  • Rooftops of Greenwich housing and Victorian terraced properties seen in a foreshortened perspective.
    house_rooftops-12-05-1996.jpg
  • Rubbish and litter blocks the waterways of a canal in east London. Algae and household pollution lies on the surface of the waters dug by navvies of the Victorian era when canals around Britain helped supply the industrial revolution with the raw ingredients to power the furnaces, mills and wharves of the transport age. This is a section of the River Neckinger that once flowed from south London into the Thames at Bermindsey but during the redevelopment of the warves into expensive riverside apartments, the waters were once again freed from 20th century dereliction.
    canal_pollution02-11-09-1993.jpg
  • Rubbish and litter blocks the waterways of a canal in Stratford, east London. Algae and household pollution lies on the surface of the waters dug by navvies of the Victorian era when canals around Britain helped supply the industrial revolution with the raw ingredients to power the furnaces, mills and wharves of the transport age. This is a small outlet of the River Lea where the future Olympic Park would be built - the waters once again freed from 20th century dereliction.
    canal_pollution01-11-09-1993.jpg
  • Aerial view of south London looking towards Victorian architecture of Camberwell Green and modern tower blocks.
    aerial_lambeth09-22-09-2012.jpg
  • Aerial view of south London looking from Camberwell towards Victorian housing and more modern housing estate.
    aerial_lambeth01-22-09-2012.jpg
  • The Victorian Fieldgate Street Synagogue next door to the construction site of the new East London Mosque in east London.
    synagogue_mosque01-07-02-2012.jpg
  • A half-bricked up and painted Victorian terraced house window.
    brick_window03-11-01-2012.jpg
  • A half-bricked up and painted Victorian terraced house window.
    brick_window01-11-01-2012.jpg
  • The Occupy London protest enters it's third day with the setting up of a tent city in St. Paul's Churchyard, below the famous Cathedral in the City of London, the capital's financial district. On the Victorian statues that site below an unseen Queen Victoria, the anti-capitalist messages are clear.
    occupy_london7-17-10-2011.jpg
  • Old Victorian rectory now home of the Rivendell Buddhist Retreat Centre, East Sussex, England.
    buddhist_retreat144-27-06-2010.jpg
  • Modern architecture on St. Giles High Street and Victorian lamp post of St Giles-in-the-Fields church in Soho, London.
    london_architecture03-16-11-2010.jpg
  • It is late morning and a lady has emerged from her bead and breakfast (B+B)  in Paignton, Devon. Sunlight is quite high in the sky and the shadows of a vine that is growing across the roof of the building's terrace, is seen on the wall behind the woman. She is seated reading a magazine in a garden chair and is surrounded by colourful flowers in their prime. Well-painted original victorian railings that act as a sort of ballustrade are in front of the female. In the window is a scene of typical seaside Englishness. Serviettes are splayed out on a table along with breakfast or dinner items awaiting guests at the next meal.
    bed_and_breakfast01-21-07-1992.jpg
  • Two local children squeeze through railings of the  unkempt cemetery attached to the Blaenau Baptist Church in the south Wales town of Abertillery (Welsh: Abertyleri). The kids have walked their dog through this field filled with old headstones and graves, playing safely in the open-air of this Welsh community. Rows of terraced Victorian homes line the distant end of this ground and then clinging to far hill side and beyond. Its population rose steeply during the period of (now defunct) mining development in South Wales, being 10,846 in 1891 and 21,945 ten years later. Lying in the mountainous mining district of the former counties of Monmouthshire and Glamorganshire, in the valley of the Ebbw Fach. In 2003, Abertillery was found to have the cheapest house prices in the United Kingdom, according to a survey by the Halifax Building Society. .
    wales_cemetery02-15-06-1986.jpg
  • Among headstones and graves, two local children play in the unkempt cemetery attached to the Blaenau Baptist Church in the south Wales town of Abertillery (Welsh: Abertyleri). Along with their pet Labrador dog who enjoys joining in on the fun, the children are playing safely in the open-air of this Welsh community. Rows of terraced Victorian homes line the distant end of this ground and then clinging to far hill side and beyond. Its population rose steeply during the period of (now defunct) mining development in South Wales, being 10,846 in 1891 and 21,945 ten years later. Lying in the mountainous mining district of the former counties of Monmouthshire and Glamorganshire, in the valley of the Ebbw Fach. In 2003, Abertillery was found to have the cheapest house prices in the United Kingdom, according to a survey by the Halifax Building Society.
    wales_cemetery01-15-06-1986.jpg
  • Construction fencing among the historical Victorian headstones of Bunhill Fields cemetery in the City of London.
    bunhill_cemetery03-26-05-2010.jpg
  • Construction fencing among the historical Victorian headstones of Bunhill Fields cemetery in the City of London.
    bunhill_cemetery01-26-05-2010.jpg
  • The artist Rachel Whiteread CBE (born 1963) sits on the steps of her best-known sculpture called 'House'. 'House' stands alone on a now-empty and house-less East London street. Oddly, the contours of the structure have been inverted to reveal an inside-out version of the original building. It is a concrete cast of the inside of an entire Victorian terraced house completed in autumn 1993 and exhibited at the location of the original property -- 193 Grove Road -- in East London (all the houses in the street had earlier been knocked down by the council). It won Whiteread the Turner Prize (the first woman to do so) for best young British artist in 1993. Here we see 'House' at a close distance with graffiti painted on the walls stating the words "Wot for ..why not!" before it was controversially demolished by the council in January 1994.
    rachel_whiteread02-15-12-2007 .jpg
  • As traffic zooms past, the art installation called 'House' stands alone on a now-empty and house-less East London street. Oddly, the contours of the structure have been inverted to reveal an inside-out version of the original building. It is a concrete cast of the inside of an entire Victorian terraced house completed in autumn 1993 and exhibited at the location of the original property -- 193 Grove Road -- in East London (all the houses in the street had earlier been knocked down by the council). Created by the artist Rachel Whiteread CBE (born 1963) this is her best-known sculpture. It won her the Turner Prize (the first woman to do so) for best young British artist in 1993. Here we see 'House' next to a lamp post which throws down it's light on a winter evening, before it was controversially demolished by the council in January 1994.
    rachel_whiteread01-15-12-2007 .jpg
  • A couple of mixed-race have put their heads through the apertures made in a painting that depicts Prince Albert and Queen Victoria, on the Palace Pier at Brighton, on the south coast of England. The faces peep through this traditional attraction that few can resist, even in the 21st century. The man's face looks disturbingly incongruous in the place where the Prince Consort's white German character would be. There is a message here of a changing multi-cultural British society where these friends or partners are from other ethnic backgrounds and where mixed-marriages are now commonplace, as opposed to the Victorian era when attitudes to racism and race-relations were vastly different.
    palace_pier_royals-16-07-1993.jpg
  • With their grand character of red brick and bay windows, railings and high-celinged rooms, are the grand properties at the junction of Cadogan Gardens and Clabon Mews SW3. On the left is the crest showing Stuart House, set in this parade of fine Victorian houses. Stuart House was constructed in 1880. It is a large red-brick detached house in the 'Queen Anne' style. Cadogan Gardens SW3, is an 1890s development between the King's Road and Sloane Street.
    belgravia091-26-04-2008.jpg
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