Lost London: From Crystal Palace to Heston Airport
Paul Knox
A history of London told through 25 vanished buildings – from grand landmarks to forgotten everyday places.
London’s built environment has been in a constant state of renewal and erasure for over two thousand years. In Lost London, architectural historian Paul Knox traces this restless urban evolution through twenty‑five demolished or destroyed buildings, revealing how economic pressure, infrastructure, war and planning policy have shaped – and erased – the city we know today.
Moving from the Great Fire of London to post‑war redevelopment and contemporary demolition culture, Knox explores sites ranging from iconic structures such as the Crystal Palace and Christ Church Greyfriars to overlooked spaces including the White Horse pub in Poplar, the Necropolis Station at Waterloo, and a lost housing estate in Hackney. Together, these buildings offer a powerful lens through which to examine changing attitudes to conservation, social housing, transport and civic identity.
At a time when demolition remains a dominant development model – with thousands of buildings lost each year – Lost London provides essential reading for architects, planners and designers concerned with heritage, adaptive reuse and the future of urban memory. Richly researched and highly readable, it is both a critical history and a source of inspiration for more thoughtful approaches to the city.
Why architects and designers will value this book
- Explores demolition as a driver of urban form and policy
- Connects architectural history with planning, infrastructure and social change
- Offers case studies relevant to conservation, retrofit and reuse debates
- Expands understanding of London beyond canonical landmarks
Ideal for:
Architects · Urban designers · Planners · Conservation professionals · Architectural students · London history and design enthusiasts
Author: Paul Knox
Publisher: Yale University Press