Finsbury Square

(Redirected fromFinsbury Fields)

Finsbury Squareis a 0.7-hectare (1.7-acre) square inFinsburyincentral Londonwhich includes a six-rink grassbowling green.[1]It was developed in 1777 on the site of a previous area of green space to the north of theCity of Londonknown asFinsbury Fields,in the parish ofSt Luke'sand nearMoorfields.It is sited on the east side ofCity Road,opposite the east side ofBunhill Fields.It is approximately 200m north ofMoorgate station,300m north-west ofLiverpool Street stationand 400m south ofOld Street station.Nearby locations areFinsbury CircusandFinsbury Pavement.Named after it, but several miles away, areFinsbury Parkandits eponymous neighbourhood. The centre of the square includes an underground NCP Car Park and two disused petrol stations, also owned by NCP for above-ground commercial parking. Finsbury Square is served bybus routes21,43,141and214.

Finsbury Square, looking south-east

History

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"Fynnesburie Field" on the"Copperplate" map of Londonof the 1550s

In 1777 Finsbury Square was laid out as a planned quadrangle of terracedtown housessurrounding a central garden.[2]Beginning in the late 19th century, the houses began to be demolished to make way for large-scale commercial properties.

Drinking fountain on Finsbury Square, commemoratingTom Smith,inventor of theChristmas cracker

Past residents of the square includePascoe Grenfell Hill,Thomas Southwood SmithandPhilip Henry Pye-Smith.It has also been the site of theTemple of the Muses,thebookshopofJames Lackingtonand the first home of therabbinicalseminarythat became theLondon School of Jewish Studies(1855–81), of theGreek OrthodoxChurch ofSaint Sophiaand of the Roman Catholic Church ofSt Mary Moorfields(1820–1900).[3]

From 1907 to 1914,[4]39 Finsbury Square was the home of theCity of London Yeomanry.[5]The site is now occupied by City Gate House which was designed by Frederick Gould andGiles Gilbert Scottand completed in 1930.[6]

In 1784,Vincenzo Lunardiachieved the first successful hot air balloon flight in England from the adjacent Artillery Ground.[7]

The south side of the square was known as Sodomites Walk in the 18th century and was notorious as a gay cruising area.[8]

On 22 October 2011,Occupy Londonprotesters began to camp on the square.[9]They were subsequently removed in an eviction described by the council as 'peaceful and low key'.[10]

In January 2013, theUniversity of Liverpoolannounced that its London Campus would be at 33 Finsbury Square.[11]

Also in 2013 a memorial was installed at the SW of the square commemorating those who died in the 1975Moorgate tube crash.[12]

Today

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University of Liverpool in London, 33 Finsbury Square

On the west side of the square, 10 Finsbury Square is a 150,000 sq ft office building[13]built in 2014.[14]It is occupied by theLondon Metal Exchange.

The north side of the square is largely occupied by Triton Court at 14–18 Finsbury Square, a steel-frame constructed office building originally built during the first three decades of the twentieth century, along with Royal London House (22–25 Finsbury Square) which dates from the 1950s.

The east of the square is occupied byGrant Thorntonaccountants and auditors at 30 Finsbury Square, and the University of Liverpool in London at 33 Finsbury Square. In November 2019, City, University of London announced that it had acquired 33 Finsbury Square on a lease. The university'sBayes Business School(formerly Cass Business School) will occupy the building, as well as significantly remodelling its Bunhill Row campus.[15]

The south of the square is City Gate House, 39–45 Finsbury Square.

Finsbury Square is also the venue for an occasional farmers' market.[16]

Royal London House and Triton Court

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Finsbury Square, looking north.

The buildings on the north side of the square were built over the first half of the twentieth century to serve as headquarters for what is now theRoyal London Group;collectively they were known as Royal London House. The oldest (westernmost) section (with itscupolaand clock on the corner with City Road) dates from 1904 to 1905 and was built byJohn Belcheras headquarters for the Royal London Friendly Society; over the next ten years this building was extended eastwards by four bays. The adjacent, taller section, with its prominent tower-cum-spire, dates from 1929 to 1930; it was built by Belcher's former partner,J. J. Joass,to form an expanded headquarters for the Royal London Mutual Assurance Society. (A contemporary extension to the north of theEdwardianblock was also built by Joass.) Finally, the whole complex was extended eastwards again in the 1950s with the addition of a block by the architect H. Bramhill.[2]

In the 1980s, the older (pre-1940s) buildings were all comprehensively redeveloped, bySheppard Robson& Partners, to form a new office complex: Triton Court. The interiors were gutted and rebuilt, but thefaçades were retained,albeit with the addition of a double-heightmansard roofand the insertion of a new entrance arch through the four-bay extension to the original Edwardian block. These are now the only remaining pre-World War II buildings in the square. After the completion of Triton Court, the 1950s block alone was left with the designation Royal London House.[2]

In 2013–15, Triton Court was developed by Resolution Property into Alphabeta, a 220,000 sq ft office block.[17]This was sold to Indonesian real estate conglomerateSinar Mas Landin 2015.[18]

At around the same time the 1950s block, Royal London House, was converted intoThe Montcalm Hotel(completed in 2016).[19]

References

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  1. ^"Finsbury Square".Archived fromthe originalon 7 April 2014.Retrieved2 April2014.
  2. ^abc"Triton Court: Planning Application August 2013"(PDF).Islington Borough Council.Retrieved15 October2019.
  3. ^"History".St Mary Moorfields.Retrieved3 June2017.
  4. ^"Regimental History"(PDF).Ministry of Defence.Retrieved3 June2017.
  5. ^"Drill Hall Register: A list of the locations of London Drill Halls since 1908"(PDF).Retrieved14 May2017.
  6. ^"City Gate House".Brookfield Properties.Retrieved3 June2017.
  7. ^John G. Gorton (1833).A topographical dictionary of Great Britain and Ireland.p. 671.
  8. ^Homosexualitiy in Eighteenth-Century England: The Sodomites' Walk in Moorfields.Rictornorton.co.uk (11 August 2009). Retrieved on 2013-08-12.
  9. ^"'Occupy London' start camp in Finsbury Square ".BBC News.22 October 2011.Retrieved22 October2011.
  10. ^"Occupy London protesters evicted from Finsbury Square".BBC News.14 June 2012.Retrieved2 April2014.
  11. ^Liverpool University in LondonProspectus 2013
  12. ^"Moorgate Tube crash memorial unveiled in Finsbury Square".BBC. 28 July 2013.Retrieved3 June2017.
  13. ^"KF enlisted for Pembroke's 10 Finsbury Sq".CoStar News.5 March 2014.Retrieved2 April2014.
  14. ^"10 Finsbury Square".Retrieved26 September2020.
  15. ^"Investing in the Cass Estate".Bayes Business School. 8 November 2019.Retrieved11 October2021.
  16. ^"Finsbury Square Farmers Market".Retrieved2 April2014.
  17. ^"Take 10… property pioneers powering the tech sector".Property Week.20 December 2013.Retrieved2 April2014.
  18. ^"Sinarmas buys London office building for £259m".businesstimes.sg.Business Times singapore. 22 July 2015.Retrieved10 July2021.
  19. ^"Finsbury Square".Retrieved25 March2014.
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51°31′15″N0°05′11″W/ 51.52089°N 0.08649°W/51.52089; -0.08649