Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Richmond House is a government building in Whitehall, City of Westminster, London. Its name comes from an historic townhouse of the Duke of Richmond that once stood on the site. History. Stewart Dukes of Richmond.

  2. The previous Richmond House was designed by Lord Burlington in the early 1730s for the 2nd Duke of Richmond. Located on the banks of the Thames in the grounds of the once the vast Whitehall Palace, the house sadly burned down on the morning of 21st December 1791.

  3. Richmond House is a government building in Whitehall, City of Westminster, London. Its name comes from an historic townhouse of the Duke of Richmond that once stood on the site. Richmond House, 79 Whitehall, London, completed in 1987 as the headquarters of the Department of Health. Entrance on Whitehall.

  4. Richmond House is a government building in Whitehall, City of Westminster, London. Its name comes from an historic townhouse of the Duke of Richmond that once stood on the site.

  5. C19 TO EARLY C20 Richmond Terrace occupies the site of Richmond House, the London residence of the Dukes of Richmond, which stood within what had been the Privy Garden attached to the old royal palace of Whitehall.

  6. Richmond House is a Grade II* listed building in Whitehall, London SW1. Richmond House 1982-4 by Sir William Whitfield and Whitfield Associates. 2019 May - Consultation starts to introduce plans for the redevelopment of the Parliament’s Northern Estate, which includes Richmond House.

  7. May 21, 2021 · A House of Commons debate has confirmed that Parliament’s controversial plans to demolish Richmond House, one of the most significant historic public buildings of the 1980s, will not now proceed.

  8. Mar 28, 2019 · Originally the Department of Health, Richmond House is a masterpiece of contextual design, its Whitehall-facing frontage picking up the stone and yellow London stock bricks of the Georgian terrace.

  9. Richmond House, Whitehall, London Photo © SAVE Britain’s Heritage. The turrets flanking the entrance to Richmond House are its public face, seen in the background of the Remembrance Day ceremony. Much more lies behind this, including the elaborate cathedral-like staircase with a working portcullis.

  10. Substantial demolition and redevelopment of Grade II* listed Richmond House to create a 6-7 storey building, plus 3 basement levels, to provide accommodation for parliamentary uses (36,852...