Suffolk House in Laurence Pountney Hill
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Title
Suffolk House in Laurence Pountney Hill
Suffolk House in Laurence Pountney Hill
Reference
SC_PHL_01_014_68_8834 (Collage 53458)
Date
Collection
The London Archives: LCC Photograph Library
Description
View of Suffolk House, 5 Laurence Pountney Hill, City of London. Typical of the neo-Gothic style is the pointed arch over the entrance; iron railings are either side of the doorway. Suffolk House and the neighbouring Norfolk House, tall neo-Gothic buildings, were designed in the 1880s by R.B. March and named after a house belonging to the Duke of Suffolk which stood on the site in the fifteenth century, and which had connections to the Duke of Norfolk. Both buildings were demolished in the 1994 and replaced with Governors House, an office block designed by Sidell Gibson Architects.
View of Suffolk House, 5 Laurence Pountney Hill, City of London. Typical of the neo-Gothic style is the pointed arch over the entrance; iron railings are either side of the doorway. Suffolk House and the neighbouring Norfolk House, tall neo-Gothic buildings, were designed in the 1880s by R.B. March and named after a house belonging to the Duke of Suffolk which stood on the site in the fifteenth century, and which had connections to the Duke of Norfolk. Both buildings were demolished in the 1994 and replaced with Governors House, an office block designed by Sidell Gibson Architects.
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