DERELICT LONDON TOILETS
London's first public lavatories were built over rivers; their output was enough to choke off the flow of the Fleet River, a tributary of the Thames.It was the Victorian engineer George Jennings who pioneered London's distinctive public conveniences - tiled underground chambers marked by iron railings or arches at street level.
Their introduction did not go unopposed, however. Playwright George Bernard Shaw, who was also a local politician, sparked outrage among burghers in his north London ward when he campaigned for a lavatory for the female workers of Camden Town.
"Many public loos occupy prime sites; thanks to the property boom, local councils have found themselves sitting on a valuable asset." THE ECONOMIST
NEW CROSS
BOW
CLERKENWELL GREEN
The proposed development of these disused public underground toilets on this historic green have been the subject of much outrage among residents and local traders.The Council have scrapped plans due to public pressure despite planning interest from 19 companies.
The Green has been visited by generations of political dissenters from the Wat Tyler to Lenin. In 1842, the Prime Minister Robert Peel banned public meetings from taking place here. In 1890, the world's 1st ever May Day march left from here.The Green was described by poet Sir John Betjeman as "a remarkable haven of peace amid the roar of public transport and heavy lorries".
Allen Maskell writes: “Excellent site, decay and the march of progress driven by local admin, mindless destruction of local history and individual style rubbed out forever. Keep it up, please, perhaps one day these people will change. Your section on Underground public toilets is of great interest to me as i do remember 10 years ago an offer from lambeth of £1 per year lease deal. perhaps i was dreaming. My idea then was to lease those disused Ladies & gents to open a music studio. The underground space having two exits to comply with fire regs etc, the offer from the mayor and his merry men dissapeared quickly.”
BERMONDSEY
Public ToLet - Refurbishment Opportunity!! Planners will stop at nothing these days............
BARNES
Chris writes: "Brought back memories seeing this -I once rode over it very worriedly as an eleven year old or so, having just slammed my pubescent wedding tackle into the handlebar stem on my bicycle while riding on Barnes Common. I was pretty certain I was going to find various bit’s of my anatomy cut off before their prime! Happy to say everything was intact! – Well at least as intact as before :=))"
SHEPHERDS BUSH
Where Wilfred Brambell (Albert Steptoe) was allegedly nicked for trying to entice boys
MILLWALL
This "amazing find" of a derelict public toilet was in a park in the Isle of Dogs overlooked by the concrete & glass structures of Canary Wharf. I was disappointed not to see any rats..... To clear up any confusion here, this Millwall is actually north of the Thames and not SE London. Many people presume that Millwall is in SE London because the football team recently played in New Cross & now in Bermondsey. Millwall Rovers was founded by workers at Morton's Jam Factory on the Isle of Dogs in 1885. Millwall played on a variety of grounds on the Isle of Dogs. It was not unusual for Millwall to attract thirty or forty thousand spectators to a game, especially at their second ground at East Ferry Road.They moved South of the River to The Den at New Cross, SE14 in 1910.
Nothing is sacred in the ever changing face (& high property prices) of London. According to the British Toilet Association -- yes, a pro-toilet lobby group-
a third of the lavatories run by city councils have closed in the last three years. There is now only one public toilet for every 10,000 people in England, they say.Some call it a fine example of urban regeneration. But others fear Britain's public toilets are an endangered species.
MORDEN
These beauties were found inside some abandoned sports pavillion changing rooms - you can see more of the "facilities" in the Sports Ground section.
KENTISH TOWN
Not so trendy toilet backstage at Bull & Gate Kentish Town.Imagine all the famous bands who have played there & used this toilet! Manic Street Preachers? Coldplay? The Darkness?
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SHOREDITCH
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CAMDEN TOWN
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BERMONDSEY
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DEPTFORD
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GRAYS INN
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BOROUGH
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BRENTFORD
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BRIXTON
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ELTHAM
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SHOREDITCH
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POPLAR
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PORTOBELLO ROAD
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FINCHLEY
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SHOREDITCH
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LOUGHBOROUGH JUNCTION
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HERNE HILL
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ILFORD
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MILLWALL
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NOTTING HILL TUBE
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NORTH WOOLWICH
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SHOOTERS HILL
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SOUTH CLAPHAM
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LOUGHBOROUGH JUNCTION
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ACTON
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NEASDEN
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STREATHAM
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KENTISH TOWN
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OLD STREET
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LONDON FIELDS
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ROTHERHITHE courtesy of: Andy Macqueen
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WEMBLEY
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CAMDEN TOWN
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ST PANCRAS
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LONDON FIELDS
HYDE PARK (Taken by Derelict London visitor Alan Naz in 2002)
CRYSTAL PALACE PARK
PUTNEY BRIDGE
HOUNSLOW
CRICKLEWOOD
TUFFNELL PARK - Continuing with the toilet theme this is a pic of garage punk band Armitage Shanks
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