H
business
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

CONTACT

EMAILmukum.sherma@gmail.com
© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

Bank of England show to remember lost splendours of Sir John Soane building

2 days ago
A picture


A century ago the wrecking ball demolished the halls, courtyards, arches and domes of one of London’s best-loved buildings in what the architectural historian Nikolaus Pevsner would decry as “the greatest architectural crime” to befall the capital in the 20th century.The Old Lady of Threadneedle Street (as the Bank of England was nicknamed after a satirical 1797 cartoon of William Pitt the Younger, prime minister from 1783 to 1801, wooing an old lady dressed in pound notes) has been the heart of the City since 1734.Refashioned and expanded over the decades, after the 1780 Gordon riots, when rioters scaled the neighbouring church of St Christopher le Stocks to throw projectiles at the Bank, the church was demolished to allow the Bank’s expansion westwards along Threadneedle Street.In 1788 the Bank appointed Sir John Soane as architect and surveyor.His redesign, which he continued until 1833, resulted in arguably his greatest work, “the pride and boast” of his life.

And so it remained, a beloved neo-classical masterpiece, until the 1920s.Today, little exists of Soane’s much-loved building; the only part still in situ is the immense curtain wall that curves around the building.But a new exhibition, Building the Bank – 100 Years On, at the Bank of England Museum, offers a window into the lost architectural splendours as the post-world war one Bank outgrew its buildings, and its rebirth as the equally impressive replacement by Sir Herbert Baker began to spring up in its place 100 years ago.Unpublished black-and-white images by the architectural photographer Francis Yerbury (1885-1970) show workers amid the rubble and exposed bricks, a decorative caryatid statue dangling beneath a great glass dome and the Bank’s new steel frame emerging above the city streets.Baker, with experience in South Africa and India, was chosen to create a building radiating “strength, permanence and reliability”, a centre of the British empire in London in the 1920s.

The building was finished in Portland stone, reaching seven floors above ground and three below, and was completed on the eve of the second world war.Baker strove to recreate much of the classical symbolism and flourishes of Soane and his predecessor the architect Robert Taylor.Jennifer Adam, the curator of the Bank of England Museum, said: “Despite the controversy surrounding the pulling down of Sir John Soane’s building, Baker’s Bank remains an effective and architecturally significant landmark in London.Baker hugely admired Soane’s work and much of the classical symbolism nods to the work of Baker’s predecessors.”Baker’s Bank, as it remains today, features the work of many artists and craftspeople.

Stunning 1930s mosaics by the Russian artist Boris Anrep decorate the ground floor and are reproduced for the exhibition.A series of mural paintings records the Bank around the time of its demolition.Sculptures by Charles Wheeler, later president of the Royal Academy, are everywhere and were the biggest sculpture commission of the period.Visitors to the free exhibition at the museum, housed in the same building as the Bank, can enjoy the entrance lobby, which is a replica of Taylor’s 18th-century Bartholomew Lane entrance.The museum also features a reproduction of Soane’s Stock Office from 1792.

The lobby of the museum rotunda, which will house part of the exhibition, is a direct copy of a space designed by Soane,The exhibition, which runs from 16 September until spring 2027, will also display Roman archaeological discoveries made on the site a century ago, including oil lamps, combs and vases,Surviving elements of Soane’s building include the original conical bricks he developed for the Bank’s rotunda, a model of the Temple of Vesta at Tivoli in Italy, which inspired his design of the Bank’s Tivoli Corner,Baker’s hand-drawn designs and sketches, including 1930s suggestions for new British coins, along with proposals for sculpture and mosaics, will also be on display,“The sculptures and mosaic are magnificent public artworks, designed to communicate the Bank’s role and purpose.

We’re excited to share them through this exhibition and celebrate the architecture and design heritage here at the Bank of England,” said Adam.Building the Bank – 100 Years On is at the Bank of England Museum, London, from 16 September
businessSee all
A picture

P&O chief who prompted outrage by sacking nearly 800 staff is to quit

The chief executive described as “Britain’s most hated boss” after sacking almost 800 workers at P&O Ferries is to leave the company.Peter Hebblethwaite prompted outrage in 2022 after P&O Ferries dismissed 786 staff and replaced them with low-paid agency workers, who received considerably less than the UK minimum wage.At the time the cross-Channel ferry company was accused of operating like “pirates of the high sea” and during questioning at a parliamentary hearing Darren Jones, then chair of the business committee, asked: “Are you in this mess because you don’t know what you’re doing, or are you just a shameless criminal?”Hebblethwaite always said his actions were the only way of saving the ferry group from going bust. No criminal charges were brought after the sackings.A spokesperson for P&O Ferries, a subsidiary of the Dubai-based ports operator DP World, said: “Peter Hebblethwaite has communicated his intention to resign from his position as chief executive officer to dedicate more time to family matters

2 days ago
A picture

UK bank shares tumble after call for windfall tax on lenders in budget

UK bank shares tumbled on Friday, cutting the combined stock market value of some of the biggest companies in the sector by more than £6bn, as fresh calls for a windfall tax on large lenders in the autumn budget spooked investors.Calls for a tax grab, in a paper written by the Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR) thinktank, took a toll on some of the UK’s biggest high street banks.NatWest was the biggest faller on the FTSE 100 on Friday, down nearly 5%. Shares in Lloyds Banking Group fell more than 3% and Barclays was down 2%. HSBC shares fell nearly 1%

2 days ago
A picture

Pre-budget lift for Rachel Reeves as UK business confidence rises

Confidence among UK businesses has grown despite anxiety about the state of the economy, in a rare slice of positive news for the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, in the run-up to her autumn budget.An August poll of UK companies by Lloyds Bank showed that improved sentiment among manufacturers and retailers helped push overall optimism within UK plc up by two percentage points, with 54% of companies now feeling confident in the current environment.It marked the fourth consecutive monthly increase in overall business sentiment, according to the Lloyds business barometer, driven by a growing number of businesses – roughly 63% – feeling strong about their own trading prospects. On that measurement alone, confidence reached its highest level since 2014.About half of all businesses now expect to hire more staff in the coming year despite growing costs

2 days ago
A picture

Bank of England show to remember lost splendours of Sir John Soane building

A century ago the wrecking ball demolished the halls, courtyards, arches and domes of one of London’s best-loved buildings in what the architectural historian Nikolaus Pevsner would decry as “the greatest architectural crime” to befall the capital in the 20th century.The Old Lady of Threadneedle Street (as the Bank of England was nicknamed after a satirical 1797 cartoon of William Pitt the Younger, prime minister from 1783 to 1801, wooing an old lady dressed in pound notes) has been the heart of the City since 1734.Refashioned and expanded over the decades, after the 1780 Gordon riots, when rioters scaled the neighbouring church of St Christopher le Stocks to throw projectiles at the Bank, the church was demolished to allow the Bank’s expansion westwards along Threadneedle Street.In 1788 the Bank appointed Sir John Soane as architect and surveyor. His redesign, which he continued until 1833, resulted in arguably his greatest work, “the pride and boast” of his life

2 days ago
A picture

Fed governor Lisa Cook sues Trump over his ‘illegal attempt’ to fire her

The Federal Reserve governor Lisa Cook has filed a lawsuit against Donald Trump over his “unprecedented and illegal attempt” to fire her, calling it an attempt to undermine the central bank’s independence.The lawsuit – filed by Cook in federal court in Washington on Thursday – sets the stage for a legal battle over the US president’s extraordinary push for greater control of the central bank.A federal judge scheduled a hearing for the case on Friday at 10 am ET, with the case likely to end up at the supreme court.Trump tried to dismiss Cook on Monday, announcing that he was removing her from her position on the Fed’s board of governors “effective immediately” over an unconfirmed allegation from one of his allies that she had obtained a mortgage on a second home she incorrectly described as her primary residence.But Cook stood her ground, arguing that Trump had “no authority” to fire her

3 days ago
A picture

Make Drax wait for its next subsidy deal. An FCA investigation is serious | Nils Pratley

There is already a scandal of bad accounting at Drax, one could say mischievously. It’s the one that maintains that transporting wood pellets from North America to burn in North Yorkshire is a “carbon neutral” activity because replacement trees absorb carbon dioxide as they grow. You don’t have to be a green lobbyist to think there’s something wrong there. As the research group Ember regularly reminds us, Drax is the UK’s biggest emitter yet qualifies for renewables subsidies.That weirdness in the methodology is one for the government to justify

3 days ago
societySee all
A picture

Potassium-rich diet may cut risk of heart failure by 24%, study suggests

2 days ago
A picture

Rayner set to hit English councils that block new housing with tougher sanctions

2 days ago
A picture

Third of children do not play outdoors after school, UK research finds

2 days ago
A picture

Why is chickenpox vaccination being offered to children in England next year?

2 days ago
A picture

Older autistic people need more help after years of misdiagnosis, review finds

2 days ago
A picture

Chickenpox jabs introduced as experts warn many children in England start school without vaccinations

2 days ago