14 Trinity Square is a Grade II listed building in London

14 Trinity Square is a Grade II listed building in London Stock Photo
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Contributor:

Rik Hamilton / Alamy Stock Photo

Image ID:

F1A21M

File size:

103.4 MB (6.7 MB Compressed download)

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Dimensions:

4912 x 7360 px | 41.6 x 62.3 cm | 16.4 x 24.5 inches | 300dpi

Date taken:

30 August 2015

Location:

14 Trinity Square is a Grade II listed building in London

More information:

10 Trinity Square is a Grade II listed building in London that was opened by David Lloyd George, then the British Prime Minister, in 1922. It is best known as being the former headquarters of the Port of London Authority. It overlooks the River Thames at Tower Hill, in the southeastern corner of the City of London. The structure was designed by Sir Edwin Cooper and built by John Mowlem & Co in 1922 as the new headquarters of the Port of London Authority. (The PLA is now based on Charterhouse Street in Smithfield.) In 1946, Trinity Square hosted the inaugural meeting of the General Assembly of the United Nations. The building was badly damaged by enemy bombing during the Blitz in World War II and when renovated in the 1970s a functional rectangular office block was built to occupy the central part of the building, which was destroyed in the War.