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131:, the entire building was requisitioned as Government offices, and it was decided to construct a shelter. A long room in the west block, originally a theatre, had supporting piers built up from the foundation, and a stout reinforced concrete slab was laid to give head cover. This was a wise decision as two direct bomb-hits caused debris to overload the upper floors, causing a vertical gash through the entire building.
225:(civil engineer) who had lodgings on the site prior to the building of the mansions. "Sir John Fowler retained in the reconstructed buildings an office which is still known as 2, Queen Square Place. There is no number one, nor any other house in the 'Place'". Fowler's insistence in keeping his old address confused many of his clients, who would regularly end up in other parts of London. His working partner,
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respectability'. A floor containing six rooms, without any grounds, commanded £300 per annum, and two rooms £60 per annum. The principal novelty of the building was the installation of hydraulic passenger lifts, at that time without precedent in domestic buildings in London. Fire control was also provided for by 98 hydrants, supplied from tanks storing 70,000 gallons on the roofs.
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A typical unit of accommodation was a living room, about 23 ft by 14 ft, a bedroom and a bathroom. In the corner blocks were some more commodious suites. Notwithstanding the prejudice against the building, no difficulty was found in letting the flats at high rents to tenants of the 'highest
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as the sole survivor of the residential properties that had formerly stood on the site. Just before the turn of the century, however, Hankey ran into financial difficulties and the property passed into the hands of the
Official Receiver. Under new management, the west block became a hotel and the
104:, but existing legislation did not explicitly prohibit building over 100 feet in height, and thus the authorities could not stop Hankey. However, the London Building Act passed in 1894, and its 80-ft height limit was a direct result of "Hankey's Mansions".
76:. Acting as his own architect, and employing his own labour, he proceeded to erect the first stage of the block. At twelve storeys, later increased to fourteen, it was the loftiest residential building in Britain.
83:
for
January 1897 describes it as "a stupendous pile which, for solidity, comfort and general convenience, sets all rivals at defiance, although twenty years have elapsed and imitations have been legion."
193:(Irish dramatist and folklorist): "AG had given up her rooms in Queen Anne's Mansions before leaving for Italy on 17 Mar," ... "she leased new rooms in Queen's Anne's Mansions at the beginning of 1902"
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199:(British explorer): "Arrived in London toward the end of June 1888, I established myself at Queen Anne's Mansions, in a small but comfortable flat on the sixth floor"
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Hankey further extended the flats in 1874 and 1877 to the south and west. There were objections to the height of the flats, not least from
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In 1947, the
Ministry of Works retained the building on a 21-year lease. It was used as an Admiralty headquarters building, housing the
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http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayFulltext?type=1&fid=778588&jid=PNS&volumeId=12&issueId=03&aid=778580
229:, tried in vain to get him to accept the change of address, but Fowler "asked his partner to yield to the foible of an old man."
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431:(Has 4 photographs of the interiors, taken 1893 to 1898...search for "Queen Annes Mansions"...accessed 30-March-2008)
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The tall superstructures on
British battleships constructed or rebuilt from the 1920s onwards, beginning with the
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187:(composer): "Elgar took a London flat in Queen Anne's Mansions so as to be able to concentrate on the concerto"
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It may have been legal complications that led him, for the remainder of the work, to employ an architect,
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Hamilton et al. National
Building Studies, special report 33, pages 143-150. Published HMSO, London 1964
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Survey of London: Volume 10, St. Margaret, Westminster, Part I: Queen Anne's Gate Area
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Quoted in
Mangeot, S.E., "Queen Anne's Mansions: the story of 'Hankey's Folly'".
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Queen Anne's
Mansions was home to the Medical Department of the Royal Navy (
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The Late-Victorian
Marriage Question: A Collection of Key New Woman Texts
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This article is about the building. For the warship superstructure, see
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119:. Robson continued the mansions around the central courtyard, leaving
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Queen Anne's
Mansions was demolished in 1973, and later replaced by
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Former buildings and structures in the City of
Westminster
437:"'Babylonian Flats' in Victorian and Edwardian London"
68:. In 1873, Henry Alers Hankey acquired a site between
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Queen Anne's Mansions (highlighted) from 1896 OS map
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124:remainder was let as flats and service suites.
111:Advertisement for the hotel and mansions, 1901
309:"Queen Anne's Mansions and Milton's Garden",
18:Nelson-class battleship § Superstructure
205:(British novelist, essayist, and journalist)
367:The Life and Letters of Sir Harry Johnston
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398:. Oxford University Press, 2004. p. 693
396:Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
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211:(medical doctor who first established
409:The Life of Sir John Fowler, Engineer
369:. Kessinger Publishing, 2005. p. 119
350:The Collected Letters of W. B. Yeats
270:"Queen Anne's Lodge | Pages 142-143"
429:English Heritage viewfinder website
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74:St James's Park Underground station
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32:Queen Anne's Mansions in 1905
259:, 13 January 1939, pp. 77-79
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209:Frederic Hervey Foster Quin
140:Women's Royal Naval Service
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331:Cambridge University Press
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496:51.49959°N 0.13430°W
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413:John Murray
343:Yeats, W.B.
311:The Builder
283:20 November
138:) and the
127:During the
57:Westminster
484:51°29′59″N
234:References
213:homeopathy
170:Facilities
487:0°08′03″W
464:161731312
384:Routledge
136:Admiralty
514:Category
65:TQ296795
217:Britain
88:History
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415:, 1900
356:, 2005
333:, 2004
164:-class
162:Nelson
47:was a
471:(PDF)
460:S2CID
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346:et al
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