Numbers 9-11 Greatorex Street, Stepney. Number 11 is a three-storey Georgian building with sash windows. The ground floor has a front shop, which are the premises of A Taite & Sons (Silversmiths) Ltd, silver & electro-plate manufacturers, with a window display of silver candlesticks, candelabras, and bowls. Number 9 is an eighteenth-century double-fronted five-bay, three-storey house, with sash windows and a central recessed doorway within a columned surround with scrolls and pediment. The middle windows of the upper floors are blind. A doorway to number 7 is visible to the left. Until 1936 Greatorex Street was named Great Garden Street. In 1896 a Synagogue was consecrated at numbers 7-9 Great Garden Street, incorporating a large square-plan skylit foundry building to the rear. The Great Garden Street Synagogue became part of the Federation of Synagogues, and at its peek had a membership of around 1700 families. In 1971 numbers 7-11 were all deemed unsafe and demolished, allowing redevelopment in front of the synagogue. Morris Lederman House was opened on the site in 1979, a headquarters for the Federation of Synagogues, incorporating administrative offices for the London Talmud Torah Council. The building housed a court, prayers' robing room and Rabbi's room, and a ground-floor burial department. Most of the congregation and the Federation's offices moved away, and the synagogue was used for worship for the last time in 1997. The complex was aquired in 1999 by the Bethnal Green Business Development Centre Trust, converted into offices and studios and the synagogue gutted. A high-level coloured-glass Star of David round window survives in the west wall.