1915–16, former clothing factory. built for S. Schneiders & Son, converted 1989–90 to form 19 mixed-use units
1963–4, warehouse on the site of the Jews' Orphan Asylum, built 1846
1797-8 sugarhouse, reduced in height in 1848, reconstructed and raised in 1894-5 and 1901, converted 2007-8, demolished 2020
Building at south end of car park is close to the site of 1960s day nursery for employees at clothing factory at 12-20 Osborn Street
1985-7, primary school
Corner block clad with pre-fabricated panels and glass, c.1970s.
2006-7 offices with flats above, on site of George Yard Ragged School
1905, school built for the London County Council
1905, built as Myrdle Street School
1960s workshop, now in college use
c.1990s, portakabin classroom north-east of Shapla Primary School
1981–2, garment factory, converted to offices, now with restaurant and Qurtubah Institute
late 20th century workshops, now college
2011-14, flats, offices and shops for Barratt Homes, on a site that included a workhouse, chapel/synagogue and the Jews' Infants' School
The London Hospital Medical College moved to this site in 1854. The building was rebuilt and enlarged in 1886–7 and 1898–9 by Rowland Plumbe
1900 as a mission hall for the Hebrew Christian Testimony to Israel, William Alfred Pite, architect
1984-7, Women's Educational Resource Centre, Matrix Feminist Design Co-operative, architects, creche wing to rear
1984-7, Women's Educational Resource Centre, Matrix Feminist Design Co-operative, architects
1994, primary school
1866–7 mission hall and infants' school, converted for free-school and synagogue use in the 1920s, adapted as a resource centre in 2001–2
c.1900 shops and workshops, upper storeys now a college
2001-5, public library for Tower Hamlets Council
1960s workshop/factory building, adapted to educational use
Special school with cookery and laundry, 1903. TJ Bailey, architect, for the School Board for London
1790s house, extended forward in 1932–3
1830-5 as the Sailors' Home facing Well (Ensign) Street, extended to Dock Street in 1863–5 (that side rebuilt 1954-7)
1980s brown brick flats with shop units to ground floor, and school to Goulston Street. On site of Davis Mansions
former clothing factory of 1955-6, partially converted in 2011
2011–13 student accommodation, replacing the Co-operative Wholesale Society's Drapery Warehouse of 1928–30
church of 1846-7, founded as a sailors' chapel, converted to be a nursery in 2002
1980-1, built as offices (occupied by the NHS) with a penthouse, converted to school in 2014. The site previously housed the King's Hall.
Bold 1960s block designed by Stephen Statham & Associates as a dental institute and students’ union.
1967-8, speculative warehouse/showroom block, also used for public-sector storage, a language school and offices
1876-7, former Board school on the site of a ragged school of 1862, closed 1911 and adapted for industrial use, converted to flats in 1996-7
house of the 1790s, extended forwards in 1920-1 as commercial premises, now a school and restaurant
1884-7, educational institution with shop, George Baines, architect, reduced in size 1899-1900, closed 1973, converted to flats in 1997
1963-4, flatted workshops with shops, built for the London County Council, part adapted for college use
1926-7, garment-making complex with house, warehouse, courtyard and garage, now with shops and workshops
1964-5 as wholesale showrooms and storage, adapted to educational use
1991-3, secondary school, on the site of Brady Street Dwellings and Brady Street Mansions
Infants' School of 1859, converted into flats
1880s Tudoresque settlement house with later additions, streetside building site of St Jude's vicarage
former workhouse burial ground (1813 to 1853) then school playground (1862 to 1965), laid out as a grass mound in 1983-5
1874, school and mission hall, adapted in 1958 to be Church House, a refuge for prostitutes
Built in 1900-1 as Commercial Street School by the School Board for London, renamed Canon Barnett Primary School 1951
1901, Jewish Day Nursery, Rowland Plumbe, architect
2014-15, part 10-, part 19-storey student accommodation building on the site of Morrison Buildings South of 1873-4
1936-7 seven-storey office building extending to Alie Street, Commercial Road front refaced in red granite 1996
2014-16, apart-hotel, on the site of the German Mission Day School, 1861–3
warehouse and offices of 1902, linked with addition of tower to rear in 2012-14
model brewery of 1846-7, with warehouse to Assam Street of 1913-20, converted 2012-14
1937 moderne shop and office building, previously known as Cardigan House, upper parts latterly used by London Metropolitan University
2004–5, seven-storey block of offices, flats and unlet shops on the site of the Whitechapel Charities' Commercial School
2009-13, women's prayer hall and community centre
2003-4, centre comprising halls and classrooms, with offices in business wing
2003–5, laboratories and offices, Capita Percy Thomas, architects
1965–7, nursing college with a distinctive round lecture theatre faced with concrete. Also known as Princess Alexandra House
1995–7, medical research centre, the Blizard Institute's National Centre for Bowel Research and Surgical Innovation, clad in 2018
1978–81, offices and research laboratories for the Wingate Institute of Neurogastroenterology, raised in 2002–4
1975–7, laboratory block constructed as a base for the Arthritis and Rheumatism Council
2007–9, laboratory block designed by NBBJ Architects
2003–5, medical research centre, two glass-clad blocks linked by a bridge, designed by Alsop & Partners and AMEC
Former school built in 1842, Alfred Richardson Mason, architect, Tudor-Gothic detailing, converted to flats in 1995
2013-14, community centre, temporary home (2016-18) of Toynbee Hall
1969–70, school, designed by Broadbent, Hastings, Reid & Todd
2010-12, student housing with a supermarket
1980-1, training centre with shops, altered c.1989 and 2015 and adapted for office use. Site of Black Lion Yard
1964–5, flatted factory, Lush & Lester, architects
2009 extension to Whitechapel Gallery housed in former 1891-2 Passmore Edwards Library. Incorporates entrance to Aldgate East tube station
1951 and 1955 former Brooke Bond tea storage and packing building, later part of London Metropolitan University
LMU events space and home of Frederick Parker furniture collection, formerly the Women's Library, on site of Whitechapel Baths
1932 former Brooke Bond welfare building, later part of London Metropolitan University
Calcutta House, former Brooke Bond tea warehouse, built 1909, later London Metropolitan University
1962 former tea warehouse, site of St Paul's German Reformed Church, later part of Calcutta House, London Metropolitan University
2004 red brick former university law building, on site of Goulston baths
Red brick church of 1888–92 designed by Arthur Cawston and converted into a medical library in the 1980s.
1869-70, primary school, on the site of the Danish–Norwegian Churh of 1694–6
1898–1901 art gallery extended 1985 and 2009 when neighbouring library incorporated
1935-6 courtyard of neo-Georgian flats built by the London County Council on site of LSB Old Castle Street board school
Tenement house in Angel Alley, built in 1869, later a George Yard Mission shelter and since 1968/9 the Feeedom Press and Bookshop
1894-6, assembly hall and staircase addition to the Whitechapel Foundation School, Frank Ponler Telfer architect
charity school of 1686, rebuilt in 1818, adapted to be a community centre in 1985-7 and for offices in 2005-6
Elementary school, built 1877–8, designed by E A Gruning, converted to flats