Geoff Browell
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Eileen Chanin
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Conclusion
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The Strand has offered up multiple perspectives to those who have lived and worked there. To British Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli, its very grandeur, was a reminder of the vast sweep of history: ‘perhaps the finest street in Europe, blending the architecture of many periods’. A pedestrian area - and accompanying street market - might then connect the Strand seamlessly with Trafalgar Square to fully realise the vision of architect John Nash and also lead to the overdue refurbishment of Charing Cross Station. It is to be hoped that the Strand’s landmarks will be preserved, notably the Savoy Hotel, Simpsons, Somerset House and the churches. A new and more terrifying pandemic remains a third possibility, perhaps one combining the virulence of diseases such as Ebola with the transmissibility of the common cold, leaving a pathetic rump of the population to eke out a living in exiled lands.

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The Strand

A Biography

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