Public house of c.1800, rebuilt c.1855, closed 2004
c1932, public house replacing a 17th-century or earlier coaching inn that had a galleried yard
pub with offices above, early 1980s, part of Central House
1879, public house, site of an inn and public house of this name since the late 17th century
1838, public house built for Joseph Tickell, extended to rear in 1850 for John A. Furze, interior refitted in 1927
1913, Trumans pub
1879-80, pair of shophouses formerly including the Shakespeare beer house
1825–6, public house, altered 1881 and 1888, renamed 1985
1936, public house built for Truman Hanbury Buxton Ltd
1873-4, public house, closed 2010 and converted to shops and flats by 2014
1993-6 Postmodern terraced house in red and stock brick, on site of Cherry Tree public house
1903, public house
formerly the Scarborough Arms public house of c.1850, converted to flats in 2011
1875–6 public house, replacing a predecessor of 1753, formerly the London Hospital Tavern
1881 as the Blue Peter public house, previously and subsequently the City of Carlisle, now flats over a cocktail bar
1937–8, neo-Georgian public house designed by Arthur Sewell, chief architect for Truman, Hanbury, Buxton & Co.
1887, formerly the Duke of Gloucester public house
1873-4 as the Weavers Arms public house, converted to shops and tenements in 1911
Built 1899-1900 as the Horns and Horseshoe public house
1993-6 Postmodern terraced house in red and stock brick, on site of Cherry Tree public house
1885 as the Bricklayers' Arms public house, later a shop, raised and converted in 2016 as flats
public house, built 1902, painted stock brick
early 19th century shophouse, much altered, on the site of the Green Dragon Inn
early 19th-century shophouse on the site of the Green Dragon Inn
1854 as a rebuilding of the Star and Garter public house, now shop and dwellings
A 19th-century building, refronted as a public house in 1925–7 in 'Brewers' Tudor' style, now a Bangladeshi restaurant
1900 former Ye Olde Angel public house, now shop with guesthouse and offices above
1909, public house, S. A. S. Yeo, architect, converted to shop use in the 1930s
1876 rebuilding of a public house with 17th-century origins, renamed by the boxer Daniel Mendoza when he was the landlord, closed about 1903
part of a building of 1846–7, a public house up to 1991
1904, public house of c.1700 origins, with a back range of 1886, closed 1950 and since converted to shop and offices
1883 pub, the Princess Alice, reduced from 5 to 3 storeys after war damage. Later renamed City Darts. Since 2014 the Culpeper gastropub
c.1850, formerly the Scarborough Arms public house, converted to flats in 2011
1894, public house
1854 as the Blue Anchor Public House
public house known from the 1720s, 1830s frontage, building largely rebuilt and refitted in the 1920s and 1930s
1871-3 public house, built by Thomas Ennor
1937 moderne shop and office building, previously known as Cardigan House, upper parts latterly used by London Metropolitan University
warehouse-office block, 1970 for Robert Frazer, ground-floor pub and club use since 1997
Queen Anne-style corner public house with residential over, rebuilt 1883, in red and stock brick with rubbed-brick decoration
Public house established 1830 as the Garrick Tavern in a former mansion with the Garrick Theatre added to the rear, all rebuilt 1852–6
Public house with 18th-century origins, rebuilt in 1845-6, music hall added to rear in 1858-9, rebuilt in 1877 and refurbished since 1979
early nineteenth-century pub, reconstructed in 1988
2010-12, student housing with a supermarket
c.2000, part of Vodafone datacentre, on the site of the Hearts of Oak public house
Built 1881-2 as the George public house, shopfront of 1934
1873, public house, now shop, restaurant and flats
Music hall of 1869-71 converted to synagogue in 1892 and to clothing factory c.1980, largely rebuilt c.2005
1858–9, converted 1997–8
1998–2001, flats with public house, developed as Prospect Tower by Berkeley Homes
public house of 1885-6, now part of Tayyabs restaurant