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St Saviour's Dock, looking north toward the Thames. The street Shad Thames is named as such in John Rocque's 1747 map of London. [1] The name may be a corruption of 'St John-at-Thames', a reference to the St John's Church which once stood south-west of the street, where the present-day London City Mission is located [2] Alternatively it may be from shad fish, which could be found in the Thames.
St Saviour's Dock (View North to Thames) St Saviour's Dock (South to Dock Head) A seal sits on a bird feeding platform in the dock in 2010. St Saviour's Dock is an inlet-style dock in London, England, on the south bank of the River Thames, 420 metres east of Tower Bridge. It forms the eastern end of the Shad Thames embankment that starts at ...
A ground floor shop was added in the mid-19th century, and is currently occupied by the Sticky Mango restaurant. Crossing street: Coin Street 32-34 Coin Street - a 4-storey building containing 7 flats, built in 1997 in yellow stock brick with stone details and concrete moulding on the ground floor. [ 22 ]
Among those to benefit from the Milli effect was K Panich. One of the oldest purveyors of mango sticky rice in the city, it first opened in 1932, just a 15-minute walk from the Grand Palace, a ...
"The Sticky" is loosely based on the real-life heist of Canadian maple syrup. According to CBC Canada, nearly 3,000 tons of the syrup, valued at $18.7 million, ...
The establishing shot that opens the video, however, shows a row of buildings along Shad Thames, and there is a recurring motif of a red beam of energy that is occasionally shown travelling along utility pole wires until the end of the song when it blasts through the window of the Java Wharf building in which the band plays. The bridge scene of ...
The heist inspired a new Prime Video series, “The Sticky” (Dec. 6), starring Margo Martindale as a syrup farmer about to have her land seized by the government.
Vauxhall (St George Wharf) Pier is a calling point for Uber Boat by Thames Clippers riverboats RB1, RB2 and RB6 services. The 93,000-square-metre (1,000,000 sq ft) mixed-use development is located between the Vauxhall Cross road junction and the river, and is near Vauxhall station .