The Open Guide to London: the free London guide - Differences between Version 8 and Version 2 of City Hall
Version 8 | Version 2 |
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== Line 4 == | == Line 4 == |
City Hall is the new headquarters of the [[Mayor of London]]. It's on the [[South Bank]] near [[Tower Bridge]], and like so many other government-commissioned structures in London, was another production from "shiny" Norman Foster and Partners in conjunction with Arup (builders of the [[Millennium Bridge|wobbly bridge]]. It was commissioned [http://society.guardian.co.uk/governinglondon/comment/0,8146,529596,00.html on the cheap], then took two years to build, and was completed in 2002. It's 148 feet of glass and steel designed around a spiral ramp, like the inside of a snail shell, with a circular, state of the art conference centre at the base of the shell, and a viewing gallery at the top from which you have a damn fine view of the river and the Tower of London. Under the base, in a section fronted by a carved-out concrete spiral of steps, there's a cafe selling the usual overpriced gack. The rest of the building is closed to the public except on very occasional open days: if you do go and see it, I can vouch for good disabled access and helpful, informative staff. |
City Hall is the new headquarters of the [[Mayor of London]]. It's on the [[South Bank]] near [[Tower Bridge]], and like so many other government-commissioned structures in London, was another production from "shiny" Norman Foster and Partners in conjunction with Arup (builders of the [[wobbly bridge]]. It was commissioned [http://society.guardian.co.uk/governinglondon/comment/0,8146,529596,00.html on the cheap], then took two years to build, and was completed in 2002. It's 148 feet of glass and steel designed around a spiral ramp, like the inside of a snail shell, with a circular, state of the art conference centre at the base of the shell, and a viewing gallery at the top from which you have a damn fine view of the river and the Tower of London. Under the base, in a section fronted by a carved-out concrete spiral of steps, there's a cafe selling the usual overpriced gack. The rest of the building is closed to the public except on very occasional open days: if you do go and see it, I can vouch for good disabled access and helpful, informative staff. |
== Line 14 == | == Line 14 == |
address='The Queen's Walk, London' |
address='' |
== Line 16 == | == Line 16 == |
edit_type='Minor tidying' fax='020 7983 4057' formatted_website_text='http://www.london.gov.uk/gla/city_hall/index.jsp ' host='213.152.57.251' hours_text='8am to 8pm, Monday to Friday' latitude='51.504340' website='' longitude='-0.077081' map_link='http://www.streetmap.co.uk/streetmap.dll?G2M?X=533444&Y=180185&A=Y&Z=1' opening_hours_text='8am to 8pm, Monday to Friday' os_x='533444' os_y='180185' phone='020 7983 4100' postcode='SE1 2AA' website='http://www.london.gov.uk/gla/city_hall/index.jsp' |
fax='' formatted_website_text='' hours_text='' map_link='' opening_hours_text='' phone='' postcode='' website='' website='http://www.london.gov.uk/gla/city_hall/index.jsp' |
Photo: husk.
Strangely for a Fozzie job it's not actually that shiny, and actually looks rather dull.
Judge for yourself:
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