Derelict London - Photography, Social History and Guided Walking Tours
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    • Dead Pubs Walk
    • Minories to Poplar
    • Woolwich Alldayer
    • Roman Road
    • Whitechapel & Bethnal Green
    • Derelict Limehouse & Poplar
    • Lost Docks of Wapping
    • Isle of Dogs
    • Grand Surrey Canal
    • London's Lost Rivers Tours
    • Shadwell & Stepney
    • Silvertown
    • Bow Creek: River Lea from Bromley by Bow to Leamouth via Canning Town
    • Croydon Canal
    • Dartford guided walk
    • Hammersmith
    • East Finchley to Gospel Oak
    • London's Lost Music Venues
    • Bridges of London
    • Tower Hamlets Special
  • 2025/26 New Pics
  • Books by Paul Talling
  • Contact
  • Dereliction and Beyond...Then and Now Photos
    • Derelict London 2008 Book Then and Now Pics
    • Then and Now Pics South of the River
    • Then and Now Pics North of the River
  • London Transport
    • Derelict London Tube Trains and Stations
    • Derelict London Railway Stations,Lines and Rolling Stock
    • Derelict London Trams
  • Factories and Warehouses
    • North of the Thames Factories and Warehouses
    • South of the Thames Factories and Warehouses
  • Derelict London Homes
    • Homes North of the Thames
    • Homes South of The Thames
    • Derelict homes now Demolished
  • Derelict London Cinemas
  • Derelict London Hospitals
    • Hospitals North of the River
    • Hospitals South of the River
    • Hospitals: Then & Now pics
  • Derelict London Pools and Baths
  • Music History
    • London's Lost Music venues 2
  • Various Derelict London Buildings
  • Derelict London Pubs
    • North London
    • Derelict East London Pubs >
      • East London Pubs from Dereliction to Demolition
      • East London Pubs - Dead Pubs to Conversion
      • East London Pubs Back from the Brink
    • Central London
    • West & South West London
    • South & South East London Pubs
  • Derelict London Cemetery & Churches
  • Derelict London Hotels and Restaurants
  • Graffiti & Streetart
  • Misc London Derelict pics
  • Derelict London Cafes
  • People
  • Porticos and Pillars
  • Shopping Trolleys
  • Derelict London Shops
  • Signs and Murals
  • Derelict London Sportsgrounds
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Derelict London - Photography, Social History and Guided Walking Tours

Derelict London 2025/26 Updates Page

Picture
abandoned fridge freezer and flytipping at derelict garages in East London
Chadwell Heath, RM6
​Welcome to the Derelict London 2025/6 page of a selection of my recent photographs. It's all a bit DIY this website as I've been adding bits all along the past 23 years. I was brought up on fanzines and prefer the non-polished look.

Join the mailing list HERE to find out about Derelict London, London's Lost Music Venues and London's Lost Rivers guided walks as soon as tickets are released, plus news on my latest books and website updates. Please note that my public walks do not involve entering any buildings.

​Rex Cinema, High Street, Stratford, E15

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​Rex Cinema, Stratford, E15 (2026)
​The Rex originally opened as the Borough Theatre and Opera House in 1896 and the venue was known as the “Drury Lane of the East” owing to the lavish interior which attracted top name stars and productions. After a refit it reopened in 1933 as the Rex Cinema and eventually became a bingo hall in 1969, where Manfred Mann’s Earth Band played in 1972 in what seemed to be a one-off gig for the venue which reverted to a cinema in 1974 for a brief spell before laying derelict for over 20 years. 

The Rex was restored and became a concert venue and club in 1997 and saw gigs by The Prodigy, Fugazi, Foo Fighters, Dizzee Rascal, Buju Banton, Usher, Jah Shaka, Bone Thugs-n-Harmony and Foxy Brown. A 2008 show by Lil Wayne was cut short after missiles were thrown from the crowd and fights broke out in the overcrowded VIP area at the side of the stage. The Guardian reported that Lil Wayne was dragged off stage by a security guard apparently due to threats on his life. In 1999 a doorman at the Rex was shot dead as gig-goers arrived for a show by Beenie Man. Two people were also injured by ricochets.

The club was repossessed by the council in 2010 and after a refurbishment it re-opened in 2012 as Sync which presented DJs, stand-up comedy, boxing matches and a private VIP section boasting views over Stratford High Street. Sync closed down after a short time and the former cinema reopened again in 2017 as an indoor trampoline park called ZAPspace which closed in 2023. Current plans are to turn the building into into a Jazz Café East. The Jazz Cafe in Camden Town has hosted top artists including Jamiroquai and Amy Winehouse.

​King Edward VII, Broadway, Stratford, E15 

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​King Edward VII, Broadway, Stratford, E15 (2026)
​The King Edward VII (known locally as “the Eddie”) is a Grade II listed former public house and appears on CAMRA’s list of historic pub interiors.

Built in the early 18th century opposite St John’s Church, it retains original pedimented doorways and early 19th-century bay windows. The pub was originally named The King of Prussia, but was renamed The King Edward VII at the outbreak of the First World War in 1914 for patriotic reasons.

The pub closed in late 2025 after being repossessed by its owner, and the lease is now being marketed.

​King's Hall, Southall, UB1

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​King's Hall, Southall, UB1 (2026)
​The King’s Hall was constructed in 1916 and operated by the Uxbridge and Southall Wesleyan Mission, where it initially screened religious films. By 1926, it was functioning as a conventional cinema, although it remained under the management of the Methodist Church.

The King’s Hall Cinema closed in 1937, after which the building reverted to religious use as the King’s Hall Methodist Church. The congregation vacated the premises in 2013, and the building has remained vacant since.

Elizabeth House and The Tower Building, York Road, Waterloo, SE1

Picture of the derelict Tower Building at Waterloo in South London
The Tower Building, Waterloo. SE1 (2025)
​Elizabeth House and The Tower Building are located on York Road adjacent to Waterloo - the UK’s busiest train station. They were built in the 1960s on a vacant site caused by a World War II V1 rocket attack in 1944, which killed three people and injured 48. 

The 12 Storey Tower Building was was home to several companies over the years. One of the most notable companies that was based there and used it as an HQ was T-Mobile UK.The company was later rebranded as EE after merging with Orange UK in 2010, and the building continued to house parts of the business under its new identity.

The 9 storey Elizabeth House was the main office HQ for the Department of Education and Science. A pedestrian footbridge lead over York Road from Waterloo Station through Elizabeth House to the Shell Centre and South Bank. The Department for Education, as they were known by then, moved out of its building in 2017. The shops on the ground floor had all closed by 2021 around the same time that the footbridge was demolished. 
Picture of the empty Elizabeth House tower block beside Waterloo Station
​Elizabeth House , Waterloo, SE1 with The Tower Building at the far end (2025)
Picture of Site of the pedestrian footbridge from Waterloo Station that lead through Elizabeth House over York Road to the Shell Centre and South Bank
Front of Elizabeth House. Site of the pedestrian footbridge from Waterloo Station that lead through Elizabeth House over York Road to the Shell Centre and South Bank.
Picture of graffiti covered blocked stairwell to pedestrian footbridge to Waterloo Station and the former Shell Centre
Front of Elizabeth House. Blocked stairwell to the pedestrian footbridge
Picture of the pedestrian footbridge from Waterloo Station that lead through Elizabeth House over York Road to the Shell Centre and South Bank
Back of Elizabeth House. Remains of the pedestrian footbridge from Waterloo Station that lead through Elizabeth House over York Road to the Shell Centre and South Bank.
Picture of boarded up row of shops at Elizabeth House at Waterloo
Front of Elizabeth House. Boarded up shops on the ground floor
Boarded up derelict Excel Gift & Internet Cafe, Waterloo
Derelict Golden Tours shop near Waterloo Station
Boarded up entrance to offices at Elizabeth House by Waterloo Station
Boarded up and graffiti covered sign for ToHealth Occupational Health Services at Elizabeth House in South London
Enough to Feed an Elephant derelict cafe near Waterloo Station
Both blocks lay derelict before imminent demolition takes place. A scheme was approved in 2019 to provide the creation of offices and new public spaces with shops better connecting Waterloo to the South Bank and surrounding area opening up access to new entrances to London Waterloo station. Due to the confined nature of the site the project will take 7 years from start to end.

No trip to the environs of Waterloo Station would be complete without a trip to the Leake Street tunnel. When the Eurostar terminal was located at Waterloo, the road allowed through vehicular traffic. However, after Eurostar relocated to St Pancras the tunnels were subsequently restricted to pedestrian use.It has since been designated as a legal graffiti zone by the local authorities.The graffiti often changes on a daily basis.
Vote 4 Clowns street art at Leake St near Waterloo Station
ADHD streetart in style of ACDC logo at Leake St Tunnels near Waterloo, South London
Beethoven street art in South London

Westbury Estate, Clapham, SW8

Picture of abandoned boarded up housing estate in Clapham, South London
Westbury Estate, Clapham, SW8. (2025)
​The Westbury Estate was originally built in the 1960s. Like many estates constructed during that era, it was designed to address the post-war housing shortage, providing social housing in the form of low-rise buildings and maisonettes.
​
Over the decades, however, the estate's buildings and infrastructure became outdated, prompting the decision for regeneration to modernise the area in phases and increase housing capacity. Like many urban housing estates, the Westbury Estate has historically faced issues such as antisocial behaviour, drug-related activity, and property crime, though it's not uniquely high compared to other areas in London.In May 2024, a man was shot and killed on the Westbury Estate. A mechanic working under the arches at nearby Portslade Rd told the South London Press: “Every two or three months I see bullets on the floor when I leave work. It’s like a game they are playing.” The man, who asked not to be named, said he felt violence in the area was on the rise. He said: “There is a lot more going on but it’s always late at night when we are not working. ​Lambeth Council stated in the plans for the replacement flats:: "The development management teams will ensure that the new design of the estate ‘designs out crime’"
Picture of boarded up council homes on the  Westbury Estate on the Lambeth and Wandsworth border in south London
Ilsley Court, Westbury Estate, Clapham, SW8 (2025)
desolate abandoned walkways on council estate in south London

​Sarm Studios - Aldgate, E1

Picture of vacant graffiti covered former Sarm Studios in Aldgate, East London
Sarm Studios - Aldgate, E1 (2025)
​Sarm Studios was established in a basement here in Osborn Street, in a 1950s building that previously housed the City of London Recording Studios. From 1960 until its closure in 1972, the facility was used for recording radio programs and narrations for newsreels. Following its closure, two recording engineers who ran a tape-copying service called Sound and Recording Mobiles acquired the site. They reopened it as SARM Studios in 1973, naming it after an acronym of their  business.

In 1975, Queen recorded sections of "Bohemian Rhapsody" and "The Prophet's Song" at Sarm Studios, and filmed the video for "Somebody to Love" at the studio the following year. The band returned to Sarm Studios in  1977 to record portions of their album News of the World, including the hit song "We Are the Champions.

Producer Trevor Horn became a frequent client at Sarm Studios, and he and the co-director Jill Sinclair married in 1980. In 1982, Sinclair and Horn founded ZTT Records and purchased Island Studios in west London, rebranding it Sarm West and the original Sarm Studio as Sarm East.Sarm East closed in 2001 
Other well known recordings at Sarn East include:
Led Zeppelin – Physical Graffiti (1975), Bob Marley & The Wailers – Exodus (1977), The Clash – Give 'Em Enough Rope (1978),Yes – Drama (1980), ABC - Lexicorn of Love (1982), Frankie Goes to Hollywood – "Relax" (1983), Grace Jones – Slave to the Rhythm (1985), Seal – "Crazy" (1990) & Madonna - Music (2000)
 
The basement studio then became an audio school called the London Recording Studios, later the London Music School, but the building’s connection to music ended in 2015.  Upper floors have been variously used since the 1970s as a hairdressing salon, solictors and accountants office. All of it is currently available for rental and in the meantime is protected by property guardians.

​All Hallows’ Church/Blackwing Studios - Borough, SE1

Picture of derelict ​All Hallows’ Church/Blackwing Studios in Borough, South London
​All Hallows’ Church/Blackwing Studios - Borough, SE1 (2025)
The original Victorian gothic All Hallows’ Church was built by George Gilbert Scott Junior in 1879-80.

It was almost entirely destroyed during the Blitz and fragments of the building remain, including two stone archways and a chapel, all incorporated into a rebuilding of the north aisle of the church in 1957.  This was closed in 1971. 

The remainder of the bombsite rubble was restored to create a walled garden with lawns, flower beds and shrubbery. The garden is owned by the Diocese of Southwark but has been managed voluntarily by a local group, the Copperfield Street Community Gardeners.

From 1980 the church was used a recording studio called Blackwing started by Eric Radcliffe, who worked on most of the early Mute Records recordings alongside Daniel Miller.At the rear of the church building was a bell tower that was used for storing master tapes.One of the first tracks Depeche Mode recorded at Blackwing was "Dreaming of Me", after being decided it would be the band's first single. At the time, Vince Clarke was unemployed, so he spent most of the daytime in the studio with Daniel Miller, who would advise Clarke on how to get sounds, use studio technology and arrange songs. Later in the afternoon, Martin Gore and Andy Fletcher would arrive from their day jobs to record melody parts.

Some notable recordings at Blackwing:
Depeche Mode — Speak & Spell (1981) & A Broken Frame (1982),Yazoo — Upstairs at Eric's (1982),Depeche Mode — A Broken Frame (1982),Cocteau Twins — Garlands (1982),Nine Inch Nails — Pretty Hate Machine (1989),Ride — Nowhere (1990),My Bloody Valentine — Loveless (1991), Pixies — Trompe le Monde (1991), Stereolab — Peng! (1992) and Emperor Tomato Ketchup (1996)
​Boarded up arched windows of the former All Hallows’ Church/Blackwing Studios. Borough in South London

THEN & NOW: Norton Folgate, Spitalfields, E1

Picture of graffiti covered boarded shops of  Victorian buildings on Norton Folgate, Spitalfields, E1
2018: Norton Folgate, Spitalfields, E1
​Situated on the fringe of the City of London, this nine-acre area, known as Norton Folgate, remained an extra-parochial liberty until 1900, meaning it fell outside the jurisdiction of any Church of England parish. This unique status contributed to its development as one of London’s most distinctive and independent neighbourhoods.

Efforts to redevelop parts of Norton Folgate have sparked significant controversy. In 2015, property developers proposed demolishing several of these buildings along the A10 corridor between Bishopsgate and Shoreditch High Street, prompting a prominent campaign to preserve the area. The Victorian-era shopping parade pictured here has since been integrated into a large new retail and office complex.
Picture of modern day Norton Folgate with restored frontage and featuring Blossom Yard and Blank Street Coffee
2026: Norton Folgate, Spitalfields, E1
Picture of derelict 15 Norton Folgate
2018 : Norton Folgate, Spitalfields, E1
Picture of restored 15 Norton Folgate
2026: Norton Folgate, Spitalfields, E1

​Gina's Restaurant -Bethnal Green Road, Shoreditch E1 

Picture of Nobodies Home graffiti on front of derelict Gina's Restaurant/Cafe on Bethnal Green Rd in Shoreditch
​Gina's Restaurant -Bethnal Green Road, Shoreditch E1 (2025)
​Gina's run by Gina and Philip Christou, first opened in Brick Lane in 1961, but moved to these premises
in 1972. By 2011, they continued to open just on Sunday for lunch, out of loyalty to their customers. Phillip passed away in 2012. The premises remain empty and is currently available to let.
Take Away Available signage and net curtains at derelict Gina's Restaurant in Bethnal Green Rd. East London
Interior of abandoned Gina's Restaurant/Cafe in Shoreditch

​Great Eastern Street Car Park - Shoreditch, EC2

Picture of graffiti covered nine-storey Shoreditch derelict building formerly a car park
Great Eastern Street Car Park - Shoreditch, EC2 (2025)
This island site at the junction of Curtain Road and Great Eastern Street is currently occupied by a graffiti covered single nine-storey derelict building used as a car park operated by NCP until 2019. Parts of the ground floor were once a petrol station, though has been occupied by the American Car Wash for the last few decades.

Home of the Winchester Club in Minder - Chalk Farm Parade, Chalk Farm, NW3

Picture of boarded up shops covered in graffiti and posters at Chalk Farm Parade, Chalk Farm, NW3
Home of the Winchester Club in Minder - Chalk Farm Parade, Chalk Farm, NW3 (2025)
​In this photograph, the area situated between Grape Sense and Early Bird marks the original filming location of The Winchester Club from the TV series Minder in 1979. At the time of filming, the site functioned as a real establishment known as The Eton Club. Scenes from the first series were filmed both inside and outside the club. The location can be seen in the closing credits for the Terry McCann years of Minder (the first seven series which aired from 1979 to 1989)and also in scenes from Series 1 Episode 6 - Aces High and Sometimes Very Low.

As the production crew was based in Hammersmith, travelling to this location became impractical. Consequently, from the second series onwards, indoor scenes were filmed on a studio set, while exterior shots were relocated to Portland Road in Notting Hill.
Scenes from a 1980 episode of The Professionals ('The Untouchables' Season 5, Episode 8) were also filmed here at The Eton Club. 

After The Eton Club closed, it became dry cleaners until 2018 and lay derelict until the demolition of the whole block in early 2025. The site is set to be redeveloped into a residential complex featuring 77 flats, named The White Angel.

​Blackfriars Crown Court - Southwark, SE1

Picture of semi-circular portico, formed by Doric order columns  at the closed down Blackfriars Crown Court in South London
Entrance to Blackfriars Crown Court - Southwark, SE1 (2025)
The site was used by HM Stationery Office since the 1920s. The current building was opened as a new printworks for HM Stationery Office in the 1950s.

In the early 1990s, the Lord Chancellor's Department decided to close Knightsbridge Crown Court and to establish a new crown court at the old printing works. The building was then refurbished, augmented by a semi-circular portico, formed by Doric order columns and re-opened as a courthouse in 1993 accommodating nine courtrooms until closing down in 2019.

In 2015, Lorraine Barwell, a custody officer at the court, died after being assaulted while escorting a prisoner.. Security contractor Serco was been fined more than £2 million for health and safety failings that led to a mentally-ill prisoner kicking her to death.

A planning application has been submitted for a mixed use development, which would see the roof of the building transformed into an "urban forest" - The building has been rebranded by developers as "Roots in the Sky to reflect its focus on sustainability, wellbeing and the provision green spaces for both public and private use".

In 2021, the building was used to film legal scenes for Top Boy on Netflix.
Picture of rear entrance to Blackfriars Crown Court in Southwark
Rear of Blackfriars Crown Court showing prison van entrance - Southwark, SE1 (2025)

​Jireh Lodge - Forest Gate, E6

Picture of ruins of burnt down house in Forest Gate, East London
​Jireh Lodge - Forest Gate, E6 (2025)
In 1888, a Mr. Allen began to hold religious meetings in the small building attached to the left of Jireh Lodge, no. 133 Sebert Road.  In 1921 another Jireh chapel was built at no. 244 Sebert Road.The membership was by then about 20. Jireh Lodge was sold after 1921 and later used for a time by the Seventh Day Adventists. In 1965 it was occupied by a builder. The above informations is from "A History of the County of Essex: Volume 6". Originally published by Victoria County History, 1973.

The term "Jireh" is derived from the Bible specifically referring to one of the names of God in the Old Testament. It comes from "Jehovah Jireh," which means "The Lord Will Provide" in Hebrew. 

Depite becoming very run down, Jirah Lodge was occupied until 2010 when it was destroyed in a gas explosion resulting in the attendance of 20 firefighters. There were no injuries.In 2013,planning permission was granted to demolish the remains of the building and construct two new houses but nothing has happened since.

​Bromley-by-Bow Gasholders  - Bromley-by-Bow, E3

Picture of abandoned empty  Bromley-by-Bow gasholders  against blue sky
Bromley-by-Bow Gasholders

The Bromley-by-Bow gasholders are a collection of seven cast iron Victorian structures located on Twelvetrees Crescent in West Ham, named after the nearby area of Bromley, now known as Bromley-by-Bow. These gasholders are considered the largest group of their kind in Britain, with the Victorian Society hailing them as "a true symbol of the Industrial Revolution."
In 1870, the Imperial Gas Light and Coke Company began constructing its largest gasworks at Bow Creek near Bromley to compete with the Beckton Gas Works owned by the Gas Light and Coke Company (GLCC). Spanning approximately 170 acres, the site replaced a former rocket factory. Before the Bromley gasworks were completed, the Imperial Company was absorbed by the GLCC.
To store gas produced at the works, nine gasholders were built between 1872 and 1878. By 1873, gas was being supplied to local factories, homes, and businesses, primarily for lighting. The site suffered damage during World War II bombings in 1940, leading to the removal of gasholder number 5 and the frame of number 3, which was replaced by a circular lake. Following the nationalisation of the GLCC in 1949, the North Thames Gas Board took ownership of the site.

With the discovery of North Sea gas in 1965, gasworks across the UK began closing, and the Bromley gasworks ceased operations in 1976. The gasholders remained functional for gas storage until 2010. The gasworks to the south of the site were later redeveloped into an industrial park.

In 2024, Newham Council approved a redevelopment plan for 2,200 new homes on the site with the gasholders to be retained, similar to the development at the rear of St Pancras Station.
Abandoned telephone box on former gasworks site in East London

OUTSIDE THE M25: Gravesend and North Kent Hospital - Gravesend, DA11 

Picture of abandoned Gravesend and North Kent Hospital building in Gravesend with peeling paintwork and broken windows
Gravesend and North Kent Hospital - Gravesend, DA11 (2025)
​On the site of the former Dispensary and Infirmary opened in 1854, this maternity block built in 1971 is the last of the hospital buildings of the Gravesend and North Kent Hospital. The adjacent main Hospital closed in 2004, with some services moving to this former maternity block, until that too closed in 2006.The main hospital buildings were demolished in 2004 to make way for the new Gravesham Community Hospital, which opened in 2006.

The vacant maternity block remains, awaiting redevelopment.It was sold for £2.3m for a new housing development in 2022 and attracted the following Daily Mail headline in 2024: "Is THIS Britain's ugliest building? Disgusted locals living next to 'monstrosity' derelict NHS hospital say it is an 'appalling' death-trap". The work will include conversion of the former maternity unit along with a side extension and a roof extension.

OUTSIDE THE M25: Portlands Club - Northfleet,DA11 

Picture
Picture of derelict Portlands (aka Factory Club) nightclub in Northfleet, Kent
Portlands Club - Northfleet,DA11
Portlands was formerly the Factory Club (later known as the Blue Circle Club) which was opened in 1878 and built at the expense of cement manufacturer, Thomas Bevan in honour of Bevan's son, coming of age and to celebrate what could be done with cement. The club was open to all members of the public and was the cultural centre of Northfleet. Two halls, a games room, sports facilities, a library and the headquarters of the Northfleet Choral Society, plus numerous other local societies were all accommodated. Among various other features added over the years was a bowling green and an outdoor swimming pool that was opened in 1907.

The building has been empty for around 30 years and has suffered 3 fires in recent years.

OUTSIDE THE M25: Along the River Thames between Northfleet and Gravesend, DA11 

Picture of broken pier falling into the River Thames between Northfleet and Gravesend
Derelict warehouse near the River Thames in Northfleet, Kent
Overgrown abandoned building in Northfleet, Kent
derelict abandoned warehouse beside the River Thames in Gravesend, Kent
Run down alleyway of semi derelict warehouses at Gordon Promenade, Gravesend
Green painted warehouse with broken windows in Gravesend beside the River Thames
Fly tipped rubber tyres in Gravesend, Kent
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