View looking south-west, showing a corner terrace with ground-floor shops and restaurant at 93-94 New Bond Street, Mayfair, at the junction with Blenheim Street. Number 94 was built in the late-nineteenth century in Flemish style and has three storeys with a five-window range and a single window in the gable. Carved heads can be seen beneath the roof cornice. The corner shop is trading as, "Ronnie Stirling", fashion retailer. There are sun awnings to both New Bond Street and Blenheim Street elevations with the name, "Stirling Cooper" repeated along the edge of the awnings. A dressed mannequin can be seen together with displays of clothing. The Stirling Cooper company was started in 1967 by two London taxi drivers, Ronnie Stirling and Jeff Cooper, who traded from these premises from 1975 to the mid 1990s. Adjacent is a business trading as, "The Old Vienna Restaurant". There is a sun awning and a hanging sign advertising the business above a double-door entrance, where signs for "Astor" can be seen. Today, the two businesses have been replaced by an art gallery. There is a partial view of number 93, a four-storey building with attic dormers. Wrought-iron Juliet balconies can be seen at each floor with decorative mouldings above each window. The ground-floor shop is trading as, "W. Bill Ltd", a specialist woollen garment retailer. An oval hanging sign advertising the business can be seen. There is a security gate across the entrance and a burglar alarm bell can be seen. To the left of the view is a partial view of Blenheim Street, where parking meters and a sign for, "Antiques" can be seen. A road sign prohibiting entry to motor vehicles, except for access, is in the foreground. In the distance are buildings in Woodcock Street, where a sign for, "The Bacchus Room" is visible above a shop window. There is a street lamp and a parked Jaguar car in New Bond Street.