U.S. Embassy in London May Leave Mayfair
Posted on: Friday, 3 October 2008, 03:00 CDT
The U.S. embassy in London may move south of the Thames, ending a 200-year-old history in Grosvenor Square in the heart of fashionable Mayfair.
Ambassador Robert Tuttle announced Thursday that he has a provisional agreement with a developer to relocate the embassy on a 5-acre site, The Independent reported. The deal would need approval from Congress.
Tuttle said the congestion charges imposed on cars driving into central London were not a motive for the proposed move. The embassy reportedly owes the city almost $4 million.
Founding father John Adams opened the first U.S. mission in London on Grosvenor Square in 1785. During World War II, Londoners nicknamed the square Eisenhower Platz because General Dwight Eisenhower's headquarters was there.
The current embassy, designed by Eero Saarinen, dates to 1960. But upgraded security in recent years has annoyed many local residents and visitors.
"If we all still wore hats, as we did in the 1930s, we would be throwing them into the air," Peter Wetherell, a real estate agent, told The Times of London.
Source: United Press International
Related Articles
- Eric Clapton Likely to Perform in North Korea Next Year
- Britons Uneasy as 7/7 Bombings Anniversary Nears
- Not so Easy: Disposing Old Boats Trying to Avoid Demolition Fees, Many Try to Sink Aging Vessels
- They Call It 'Blood Alley'
- One Set of Rules for Us, Another for Railroads
- Port of Oakland Puts Final Touches on 2005-06 Budget
- BioPartnering Europe -- BPE -- Programme Highlights the Hottest Topics in the Biotech Industry Today
- Families of London bomb victims shown blast sites
- U.S. Mass Transit Goes on High Alert, Increases Security
- BART Strike a Test for Traffic Group
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds