PLA

Ten Trinity Square, December 2017.

Ten Trinity Square was built around the time of WWI as the headquarters of the recently established (1908) Port of London Authority (PLA). Today it is a luxury hotel and I thought that London now is insignificant as a port but, as so often, I am wrong.

London is the second largest port in the UK, after Grimsby and Immingham on the Humber estuary, and the jurisdiction of the PLA extends further than you might expect: for ninety-five miles from the North Sea to this obelisk below Teddington Locks and weirs.

PLA obelisk, March 2018.

On Monday I took Reggie (spaniel) up the towpath from Putney to Richmond so yesterday wanted to ring the changes. I went on the tube to Richmond and continued upstream. There are good views of Marble Hill House and Ham House. I had been to the latter in the early 1980s as a guest of the London Architects’ Association (?) for a party but, to sing for my supper, I drove their Patron, the Duke of Grafton, there in my Ford Fiesta (company car). He had strong nerves and didn’t seem to notice how drunk I was on the return journey.

Marble Hill, March 2018.
Ham House, March 2018.

Then the Teddington obelisk, Teddington lock and a stone to mark the boundary between the boroughs of Richmond and Kingston.

Teddington Lock, March 2018.
Boundary stone, March 2018.

I came back on the train from Kingston saving Strawberry Hill and Hampton Court for another day. Kingston town centre is horrific; architecturally pedestrian but not designed for pedestrians. It is a paean to the cult of the motor car. But let’s end on a happier note. There are no gulls above Richmond, probably because it’s not tidal but I did snap this adult Egyptian goose near Ham House. I’m rather pleased that I’m able to demote Robert as Chief Ornithological Photographer, a position he held in 2015, see Sea Eagles and Hurricanes. (He says, non-swank, that I’ve got much better at taking photographs.)

Egyptian Goose, Thames near Ham, March 2018.

And there is a paean beneath yesterday’s post, Family History, from regular commentator HH – he didn’t have to be so nice.