Discover the
municipal architecture
of Woolwich
and surrounding areas
Join Open City and local resident Rosamund Lily West to explore the municipal architecture of this most distinct of London’s districts, Woolwich
Woolwich was a major manufacturing centre with factories, a dockyard and the Royal Arsenal situated on the banks of the Thames. Alongside a strong and independent civic identity, Woolwich also maintained a significant military presence: a legacy that lives on in pub names and street names such as General Gordon Square as well as the Royal Artillery barracks and the presence of the King’s Troop, Royal Horse Artillery. Recently, Woolwich has seen a period of great change. One of Historic England’s Heritage Action Zones, Powis Street has been declared a conservation area.
The walk begins at the new Elizabeth Line station. Designed by Weston Williamson & Partners, it references the site’s armament manufacturing history and sits alongside listed buildings in Dial Arch Square, the home of the original Arsenal Football Club. The tour will pass key buildings around Woolwich’s main squares, Beresford Square and General Gordon Square. We will visit 20th century buildings showing the commercial history of Woolwich such as the former Woolwich covered market, completed in 1936, and Equitable House, headquarters of the Woolwich Equitable Building Society.
The tour will head down Woolwich’s main shopping street, Powis Street, seeing evidence of Woolwich’s shopping past and home to department stores such as Cuffs, Garretts and the Royal Arsenal Cooperative Society (RACS). Two RACS buildings dominate the end of Powis Street showing the area’s importance as a shopping centre in the 20th century.
Rightly proud of its housing and wary of ‘barrack-like’ blocks of flats, Woolwich built the relatively low-rise St Mary’s estate. Within this estate we will visit Norman & Dawbarn’s Frances Street towers, elegantly positioned on Frances Street overlooking the Thames.
The final destination will be within Woolwich’s main municipal precinct where the town hall, public baths and the old library are all located. Here, we will visit Market Street Health Centre before finishing up back in Dial Arch Square by the new Elizabeth Line station alongside Woolwich’s newest homes where residents enjoy riverside living.
Key information
Meet: Dial Arch Square, London, SE18 6FL (outside Woolwich Elizabeth Line station). (the 2nd stop on the tour is
End: back at the starting point
Distance: 2.5 miles
Duration: 2 hrs approx
Cost: £19.50 /£14.50 / £13.50 / £9.50
Tickets are non refundable and our tours go ahead rain or shine…
We aim to be inclusive and accessible where possible, please contact Adrianna at tours@open-city.org.uk to discuss your needs, reduced ticket prices and if you require a free carer ticket or have any additional queries.
This tour is published as a Pocket London. You can purchase the printed guide from the Open City Shop as part of the Pocket London: The Golden Era of Social Housing pack.
MEET THE TOUR GUIDE
Rosamund Lily West is a Lecturer in Architectural Studies at the University of Manchester where she is part of Manchester Architectural Research Group, and also lectures in design history and theory at Chelsea College of Arts. Prior to this, she worked as Research Fellow at the Survey of London based at the Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL, having previously worked in museums for fifteen years.
She is interested in public and community engagement with heritage, public art and the built environment and has led architectural tours for the V&A, London Festival of Architecture and the Architecture Foundation. Rosamund recently completed her PhD, 'Concrete citizens' sculptures and the London County Council's housing schemes, 1949 to 1965' at Kingston University.
Rosamund joined the Open City tours team in November 2021.