River Thames at Night, February 2005

One cold February evening, a friend and I were standing around with tripods photographing some of the more famous London landmarks around the Tower Bridge area.  Here are the results.  These were taken with a Canon EOS5 and Fuji slide film (from memory, most probably Sensia).

London in black & white

Architect Sir Giles Glibert Scott was responsible for the iconic red phone booths of the early 20th century and the Art Deco “Cathedral of Power”, Battersea Power station, the last part of which closed in 1983.  This example of the phone booth has been left on the north bank of the Thames near Pimlico, with the power station the other side of the river.  Although derelict and having changed owners several times as their development plans came to nothing, the coal cranes that would have unloaded the fuel from ships travelling up the Thames still stand.  February 2009.

Coal cranes outside Battersea Power Station