Brune Street, London

Soup kitchens for the Jewish community in London had existed since 1854. The one pictured above in Brune Street, Spitalfields, London opened in 1902. Above the frontage, the wording ‘Soup Kitchen for the Jewish Poor’, and the opening date 5662 (Jewish calendar) and 1902 can clearly be seen. This photograph is difficult to date, although I would estimate it to be around the 1950s. Also, above the door, a soup bowl and ladle can be seen. The ‘Way In’ and ‘Way Out’ doors are either side of the main entrance. Image: Photographer unknown
I took this photograph in April 2021. Following the closure of the soup kitchen in 1992, the building has been repurposed and is now occupied by seven apartments.
Image: © Steven Miell (TimeViews)
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Portland Place, London

A photograph (taken in the early 1930s) of Broadcasting House – the BBC’s headquarters in Portland Place in London. The building was opened officially in May 1932 which helps to date this photograph because the Eric Gill statue (Prospero and Ariel) was not installed until 1932. The building is a good example of the ‘Art Deco’ style and was constructed using Portland stone placed over a steel frame.
Image: Photographer unknown
In the intervening years, Broadcasting House has been extensively renovated and extended. The building to the right in the first photograph was demolished and replaced by the new wing seen in the second photograph. In 2012, this wing was named the ‘John Peel Wing’ in tribute to the disc jockey. The main building was also refurbished with a large extension added to the rear of the existing building.
Image: © Steven Miell (TimeViews) 2016
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Royal Academy of Arts, Burlington House, Piccadilly, London

In 1768, the Royal Academy of Arts (RA) was founded. Its mission was to ‘promote the arts of design in Britain through education and exhibition’. The painter Joshua Reynolds was the RA’s first president, and a statue of Reynolds can be seen in front of the entrance to Burlington House. The statue was erected in 1931 and is Grade II listed.
The RA was initially based in a small building in Pall Mall. Following several moves, the RA moved to this location in 1868 – 100 years after the Academy’s foundation. Burlington House is owned by the British Government.
One of London’s major annual events is the Royal Academy Summer Exhibition.
Image: Photographer unknown (1930s)
An unchanged view of Burlington House in May 2019.
Image: © Steven Miell (TimeViews)
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Buckingham Palace, London

Standing at the bottom of Constitution Hill, a Canadian businessman on a trip to London took this photograph of Buckingham Palace in May 1950, just five years after World War 2. King George Vl was the reigning Monarch.
Image: DianP’s father
From the same position in May 2019. The growth of the trees to the left of the Palace is very apparent.
Image: © Steven Miell (TimeViews)
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Charing Cross Road, London

Taken in 1955 by Allan Hailstone, this photograph shows Foyles – the best-known bookstore in London. It was founded by brothers William and Gilbert Foyle in 1903, and was initially a second-hand book business based at their home. Their first West End store was opened in Cecil Court in 1904. In 1906, they opened the Charing Cross Road store and quickly became London’s largest educational booksellers.
Image: Allan Hailstone
Towards the end of 2011, Foyles sold the lease of the building in the first photograph and moved to premises further down Charing Cross Road, previously occupied by the Central St. Martins College of Art and Design. The move was completed by June 2014 and in 2018 Foyles was purchased by Waterstones, who decided to retain the name. I took this photograph in October 2020.
Image: © Steven Miell (TimeViews)
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Bank, London

‘Bank’ ( a London Underground station) is under the intersection of a number of roads in the City of London – directly in front of the Bank of England. On January 11th 1941, a German bomb made a direct hit on the station and 51 people were killed. The damage necessitated the building of a temporary Bailey bridge to maintain traffic flow.
Image: Museum of London
In March 2019, the area has been (virtually) pedestrianised with no trace of the war damage.
Image: © Steven Miell (TimeViews)
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St. John’s Wood Station, London

St. John’s Wood station opened in November 1939, just after the outbreak of World War II. The photograph was taken in the 1950s. This new station replaced the ‘Lord’s’ (St’ John’s Wood Road) and ‘Marlborough Road’ stations which had closed the previous day. The station was on the Bakerloo line until it was transferred to the Jubilee line in May 1979. Also, the use of the apostrophe in ‘John’s’ is absent here, but present in the later photograph (below). The use of the apostrophe has been described as ‘intermittent’ but is declining.
The station building – designed by Stanley Heaps – is now Grade II listed.
Image: London Transport Museum
In April 2017, flats built above the station can be seen, while the frontage and approach is largely unchanged.
Image: © Steven Miell (TimeViews)
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High Road, Tottenham, London

In October 2014, there were a few signs of the development of the new Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, and the old ‘White Hart Lane’ stadium can clearly be seen.
Image: © Steven Miell (TimeViews)
Two and a half years later (March 2017), the new stadium is growing rapidly and is swallowing the old one.
Image: © Steven Miell (TimeViews)
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