Elevated view of The Adam and Eve public house and Warren Street Station, looking west along Euston Road in the former Metropolitan Borough of St Pancras, across the junction with Hampstead Road, right, and Tottenham Court Road. The Ind Coope brewery brick-built pub is heavily architecturally embellished with carved brick arches with moulded stucco keystones above sash windows, rope twist and moulded bands at mid-storey height. A French window at the corner with a carved stone balcony, with a pediment above, bracketed window cills, and ocular dormer windows, with moulded arches above, and a bracketed cornice below. Designed by Leslie Green, and later refurbished by William Holden, Warren Street station stands on the opposite corner at the end of a terrace of six-storey offices. With a semi-circular entrance with a semi-octagonal canopy, two-storeys of offices above, and rendered up to second-floor level with exposed brick above. Shops visible in Hampstead Road include 'Maynards' with Petsa ladies hair stylist above, 'Achille Serre', dry cleaners, and Etam, lingerie store. Further along Euston Road, shops include a branch of Boots chemists, Buck and Ryan, tool merchants at 310 to 312, and 'The House of Janus', on the opposite side. Great Portland Street station is visible in the distance. The ashlar banded building, on the immediate right next to a pillar box, is a branch of National Westminster Bank Ltd. The busy junction has queuing vehicles including a Bristol MW coach, RT and Routemaster double-decker buses, a Ford Popular 100E, an Austin Cambridge A55, a Morris LD van, an Acrow Bedford S series flat bed lorry carrying scaffolding, Ford Consul, Anglia and Zephyr models, Austin FX3 taxi, A30 and A40 Farina models, a Bedford CA van, directed at the light-controlled junction by a policeman. The pavements around the junction are busy with pedestrians.