View looking north-west, showing a terrace of warehouses at 15-21 Neal Street and 34 Shelton Street, Covent Garden. There is a partial view of 15 Neal Street, where a large, shuttered, warehouse door can be seen and the name, "Dupart Ltd" is visible above. Number 17-19 has the names, "F. A. Forrester & Sons" and "Osborne Bros. (Bananas) Ltd Banana Merchants" above the entrance. Blind window spaces can be seen above together with a hanging wall lantern. Both premises are Grade II listed together; listing number 1267202. Number 21 Neal Street is trading as, "Major Bros. (Produce) Ltd" where four panelled doors can be seen. Number 34 Shelton Street, at the end of the terrace, has a recessed entrance visible with old posters on the wall. The buildings are Grade II listed; listing number 1236199. Neal Street was named after the late seventeenth-century MP, property developer and entrepreneur, Thomas Neale. Built in the early-nineteenth century, the four-storey buildings were part of a large brewery complex. In the distance can be seen 25-37 Neal Street. The "Crown & Anchor" public house can be seen in the distance to the right at 22 Neal Street with multi-storey apartments at Century House in Shaftesbury Avenue in the far distance. To the extreme right of the view is security fencing bordering an old bomb site. There are numerous vehicles in the street including a Ford Transit van. There is a "No left turn" sign and a "Stop" sign in view.