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Chartered Accountants' Hall is a Grade II* listed building located at 1 Moorgate Place in the City of London. It is the headquarters of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England & Wales (ICAEW). The Hall is one of the richest examples of late Victorian architecture in the City and has been praised for its seamless integration of ...
The street was constructed around 1846 as one of the new approaches to London Bridge. While the street was formally known as "Moorgate Street", the street part of the name eventually fell out of use. The Chartered Accountants' Hall, on Moorgate Place, is the home of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales.
Moor House is a large office building on London Wall in Moorgate, located in the City of London.. It is located on the northern edge of the financial district and is one of the largest buildings in the area, standing 84 metres (276 ft) tall and with 29,000 square metres (310,000 sq ft) of floor space.
Moorgate is a central London railway terminus and connected London Underground station on Moorgate in the City of London. Main line railway services for Hertford , Welwyn Garden City and Stevenage are operated by Great Northern , while the Underground station is served by the Circle , Hammersmith & City , Metropolitan and Northern lines .
Statue of John Keats, Moorgate (2024) by Martin Jennings Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Statue of John Keats .
A statue of the English Romantic poet John Keats is located in Moorfields, Moorgate in the City of London. It was sculpted by Martin Jennings and depicts a larger than life-size copy of a life mask of Keats taken aged 21. Keats was the son of an ostler at the nearby inn, The Swan and Hoop. [1]
St Mary Moorfields is a Roman Catholic church in Eldon Street near Moorgate, on a site previously known as Moorfields. It is the only Catholic church in the City of London . [ 1 ] Prior to a 1994 boundary change, the church was in the Borough of Hackney , such that there were no Catholic churches in the City.
The Moor place-name element usually refers to fen environments, [11] and the wet nature of the area persisted, though this was improved by a drainage scheme in 1572. [ 12 ] In the 15th century the monasteries of Charterhouse and St Bartholomews diverted the headwaters of the Walbrook to their sites in the River Fleet catchment.