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This is one of numerous photos, postcards and sketches from the notebooks of the late Mr G.W. Mason., past Senior Partner of Bunch & Duke chartered surveyors at 360 Mare Street, Hackney.

GBRF Class 66722 passes Hackney Central on 10:27 6060 Bow Yard to Tonbridge empty aggregate hoppers.

At Hackney WickED Festival

CAMPEÓN MACHO

Box: 1965 - SILVER GHOST TAPA BOCA

Expositor: GRETHER, ALBERTO RICARDO

At Hackney WickED Festival

Pages of Hackney. Got an awesome signed Patti Smith book.

Live in Hertford Theatre tonight and what a show!

The Hackney Brook flowed roughly along the line of that shadow under the railway bridge

Diorama showing the bus garage in Well Street. Hackney.

One of a number of Kingsway dioramas that will be for sale at the London Bus Museum Transport Fest 2012, next Sunday 21st October.

 

www.kingswaymodels.com

Hackney architecture, London E8

ONE OF SEVERAL BOUGHT OF THE INTERNET RECENTLY. IF ANYONE CAN FILL IN ANY DETAILS PLEASE FEEL FREE, COPYRIGHT BELIEVED TO REST WITH MICHAEL DRYHURST

 

SIMON

Greater Anglia class 317654 passes Hackney Downs on a Liverpool street service from Stanstead Airport.

Hackney Free & Parochial Church of England Secondary School, south-facing exterior detail. Avanti Architects, 2011, BSF funded. Steel frame, pre-cast concrete floor slabs and a mixture of façade materials. Landscaping architects: MESH. London Borough of Hackney.

 

Image: Copyright ©2011 George Rex. All Rights Reserved.

Hackney Wick, London

Hackney Wick covered in graffiti with Canary Wharf and the Olympics stadium in the background.

This is piece no. 2 in my Hackney Mosaic. Piece no. 1 is here. www.flickr.com/photos/tomsgardenshed/2090184367/

 

I’m going to try to understand a little more of the place where I live by building a mosaic of words and pictures over time. This snapshot dates from October 2004. I like this picture because it unequivocally lets you know where you are and it gives Hackney a bright up-to-date image.

 

Hackney is an east London inner city area with more than its fair share of deprivation and social problems. That will no doubt show over time, but for the moment I just want to celebrate something that’s good.

 

Hackney Empire was built in 1901 as a music hall. Marie Lloyd lived just around the corner and played here often. Others who have trodden the boards include Charley Chaplin, Stan Laurel, Louis Armstrong and Tony Hancock. It was converted to a bingo hall in 1963, became a listed building in 1983 and, thanks to the efforts of Roland Muldoon, was reopened as a Variety in 1986. Since then funds have been raised and extensive restoration and improvement has happened, including this update of the pub next door. The theatre's artistic aim is, as ever, to provide something good for everybody. So what’s on now? www.hackneyempire.co.uk/index.php

 

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