
Further off, however, St Paul's Cathedral - clearly visible in 1911 at the top of the picture - is now only just to be seen squeezed between two dark tower blocks, and dwarfed by skyscrapers beyond. Below it, in 1911, the dome of the Methodist Central Hall is being contructed - it can only be partially glimpsed now between the two dark blocks. This was, briefly, the home of the League of Nations (predecessor of thre United Nations) after World War I. Not much else survives; the mansion block of Artillery Row (centre right) endures, looking rather dark in 1911 but actually faced in light coloured stone. In the centre of the older picture, a bridge links the two sites of the famed Army and Navy Store - the essential stopping off place for any expedition to the furthest reaches of the world. The Store is still there, and a bridge between the two sites, but now manifested in modern blocks (and, more shockingly, rebranded as 'House of Fraser').
Above the central tower block can be seen one of the newer additions to the London skyline, the London Eye - the huge Ferris Wheel which was the scene of a magnificent firework display on New Year's Night. If you enlarge the newer picutre, you will see another newcomer between the London Eye and the top of Big Ben; 30 St Mary Axe, better known (for obvious reasons) as 'The Gherkin'!
The view of "then" must have been more impressive and interesting than "now".
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