Building    To 2008

Faraday Building North

Categories: Other

Faraday Building North (FBN) was built in the late 1800s as an extension to what was at the time the Post Office Savings Bank HQ. That was on the other side of Knightrider Street, facing onto Queen Victoria Street, the site now occupied by the 1950s 'Faraday Building'.

On an 1890s map FBN is labelled 'Controller’s Offices (London Telephone Service, GPO)'. A 1950s map shows that both the buildings, either side of Knightrider Street, had been enlarged eastwards to Godliman Street, engulfing their respective blocks. 

This rapid expansion is explained by telephones.  As this new technology was introduced and its use expanded, the GPO needed space to house the exchanges. FBN housed the City, Central, Long Distance and International Telephone Exchanges, 1902-82. As the technology developed and exchanges became automated the space was no longer neeeded. FBN was vacated in 1982 and (based on the July 2008 Google Street View) its demolition and replacement was not completed until 2008. 

The imposing Carter Lane entrance to the building (shown in this photo) was retained and re-erected on the 2008 replacement, in Addle Hill. Also in this photo you can see the railings which were also retained and re-erected on the Addle Hill frontage.

We'd just had the idea that surely there was a tunnel connecting these buildings (even if only for cables) when we spotted on the 1950s map 2 gray connections across Knightrider Street, both labelled 'FB', footbridge.  We still hope there was a tunnel!  For more (possible) tunnels see William Lyttle, the Mole man.

Sources: A London Inheritance (where you will find the maps), Light Straw (whom we thank for the photo).

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in here to see them

This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Faraday Building North

Commemorated ati

Faraday Building North

An unusual amount of punctuation for a plaque.

Read More

Other Subjects

Fortune Theatre - WC2

Fortune Theatre - WC2

Designed by Ernest Schaufelberg, this was the first London theatre to be built after the end of WW1, and one of the first buildings in London to to use ferro-concrete construction. Built on the sit...

Building, Theatre

2 memorials
Willesden Library

Willesden Library

The newly built up Willesden area was provided with a library, completed in 1894. It was extended at the back in 1907, part funded by Andrew Carnegie. The whole back section was rebuilt with addit...

Building, Museums / Libraries

1 memorial
Cornhill Standard

Cornhill Standard

A water conduit, and point of measurement. From Wikipedia: "first mechanically pumped public water supply in London, constructed in 1582 on the site of earlier hand-pumped wells and gravity-fed con...

Building, Food & Drink

2 memorials
King's Hall Picture Palace

King's Hall Picture Palace

It is thought to have been the first purpose built cinema in Britain, with a seating capacity of 850. Over the years it was renamed as the 'Gaiety Picture House' and then the 'Regent Cinema'. It wa...

Building, Cinema

1 memorial
Prince of Wales pub, Stockwell

Prince of Wales pub, Stockwell

The Prince of Wales public house was at 294 Clapham Road on the corner of Paradise Road from at least 1856. On Sunday 13th October 1940 a WW2 bomb destroyed the front section of the pub killing 32 ...

Building

2 memorials

Previously viewed

Royal Literary Fund

Royal Literary Fund

British benevolent fund for professional published authors in financial difficulties. The Prince Regent supported it by providing premises at 36 Gerrard Street.

Group, Literature, Philanthropy

1 memorial