View along Euston Road in the former Metropolitan Borough of St Pancras, looking west across the junction with Duke's Road on the left, and Churchway on the right. Buildings visible on the left include a modern 10-storey concrete and glass building (currently a hotel), the Grade I listed entry 1379062 Church of St Pancras, with its 'wedding cake'-style bell tower, and the c1928 Classical Revival style, Nettlefold House, on the far side of Upper Woburn Place. The heavily architecturally embellished head office of the Hearts of Oak Benefit Society (1842-2000), opened by King Edward VII in 1906, is visible on the right-hand side, demolished and replaced c1971 by the multi-storey Evergreen House office building, with the Grade II listed entry 1342039 Euston Fire Station, further down, with Euston Square Gardens beyond. Numerous vehicles can be seen, parked and heading west on Euston Road including a Morris Minor, a Rootes Group Hillman Minx, Triumph Herald models, a Vauxhall Via HA saloon, a Wolseley 6/99 saloon, a Ford Anglia 105E, a Morris 1100, a Singer Gazelle, and many other cars and buses, along with numerous pedestrians.