Lost London
From Crystal Palace to Heston Airport, a History in 25 Missing Buildings
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Yale University Press
Publishing:28th Apr '26
£25.00
This title is due to be published on 28th April, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

An engaging, beautifully illustrated history of London told through twenty-five lost buildings
London has been rebuilt and reshaped perhaps more than any other city over its two-millennia history. From the construction of the Underground to slum clearance and the Blitz, buildings have long been damaged or demolished to pave way for the new. Today, demolition is big business, and around 3500 buildings are destroyed each year, most of which are social housing.
Paul Knox traces the history of London from the Great Fire to the present day through twenty-five lost buildings. Knox explores surprising and unusual locations in the city’s history, like the Necropolis Station in Waterloo used by funeral parties traveling to a burial ground in Surrey. We see historic landmarks, like Christ Church Greyfriars and the Crystal Palace, as well as everyday places like the White Horse pub in Poplar and a housing estate in Hackney. This is a fascinating study of London’s restless landscape, showing how conservation has changed over 400 years.
“London is a great living city, but also a great dying one. This is a splendid obituary of its lost masterpieces.”—Simon Jenkins, author of A Short History of London
“An engagingly diverse and attractively curated selection of buildings whose loss still shocks and saddens today.”—Steven Parissien, author of Building Britannia
ISBN: 9780300282085
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
408 pages