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Scotland Yard

Headquarters of the Metropolitan Police Service, Westminster, Greater London


Headquarters of the Metropolitan Police Service, Westminster, Greater London

FieldValue
nameScotland Yard
imageNew Scotland Yard sign.jpg
image_alt
image_captionThe iconic sign outside the New Scotland Yard came to prominence when it was first located outside an earlier Scotland Yard building.
alternate_namesNew Scotland Yard
address* 1829–1890: 4 Whitehall Place, St James's, City of Westminster (with a public entrance in Great Scotland Yard)
location_cityCity of Westminster, Greater London
location_countryUnited Kingdom
coordinates
demolition_date
rooms
website
  • 1890–1967: Norman Shaw Buildings, Victoria Embankment, City of Westminster
  • 1967–2016: 8–10 Broadway, City of Westminster
  • 2016–present: New Scotland Yard, Victoria Embankment Scotland Yard (officially New Scotland Yard) is the headquarters of the Metropolitan Police, the territorial police force responsible for policing Greater London's 32 boroughs, and several additional authorities throughout the United Kingdom. Its name derives from the location of the original Metropolitan Police headquarters at 4 Whitehall Place, which had its main public entrance on the Westminster street called Great Scotland Yard. The Scotland Yard entrance became the public entrance, and over time "Scotland Yard" came to be used not only as the common name of the headquarters building, but also as a metonym for the Metropolitan Police Service (MPS) itself and police officers, especially detectives, who serve in it. The New York Times wrote in 1964 that, just as Wall Street gave its name to New York's financial district, Scotland Yard became the name for police activity in London.

The force moved from Great Scotland Yard in 1890, to a newly completed building on the Victoria Embankment, and the name "New Scotland Yard" was adopted for the new headquarters. An adjacent building was completed in 1906. A third building was added in 1940. In 1967 the MPS consolidated its headquarters from the three-building complex to a tall, newly constructed "New Scotland Yard" building on Broadway in nearby Victoria. In 2013, it was announced that the force would move again to the Victoria Embankment at Westminster's Curtis Green Building, which following tradition was renamed "New Scotland Yard". This move to the latest New Scotland Yard was completed in 2016.

History

The Metropolitan Police Service is responsible for law enforcement within Greater London, excluding the square mile of the City of London, which is covered by the City of London Police, and also excluding the London Underground and National Rail networks, which are the responsibility of the British Transport Police.

4 Whitehall Place

The Metropolitan Police was formed by Robert Peel with the implementation of the Metropolitan Police Act, passed by Parliament in 1829. Peel, with the help of Eugène-François Vidocq, selected the original site on Whitehall Place for the new police headquarters. The first two commissioners, Charles Rowan and Richard Mayne, along with various police officers and staff, occupied the building. Previously a private house, 4 Whitehall Place () backed onto a street called Great Scotland Yard. The building now on the site of 4 Whitehall Place (the 1950s rear extension to the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food) still has a rear entrance on Great Scotland Yard.

By 1887, the Metropolitan Police headquarters had expanded from 4 Whitehall Place into several neighbouring addresses, including 3, 5, 21 and 22 Whitehall Place and several stables, including one at 7 Great Scotland Yard still in use by the mounted branch. These also included buildings which fronted onto the north side of Great Scotland Yard, with the address of 8 and 9 Great Scotland Yard, sometimes shown on maps as a station or "police office" on A Division but actually used from 1842 as the central headquarters of the new Detective Branch. Those buildings were damaged in an 1884 Fenian bomb attack and are now lost under the former Central London Recruiting Office, which was acquired by hypermarkets operator Lulu Group International in 2015 and reopened as a Hyatt luxury hotel four years later.

Victoria Embankment

In the 1880s the force decided that it had outgrown its original site, and moved to a new headquarters designed by architect Richard Norman Shaw () on the Victoria Embankment, overlooking the River Thames, south of what is now the Ministry of Defence's headquarters. In 1888, during the construction of the new building, workers discovered the dismembered torso of a female; the case, known as the 'Whitehall Mystery', was never solved. In 1890, police headquarters moved to the new location, which was named New Scotland Yard. By this time, the Metropolitan Police had grown from its initial 1,000 officers to about 13,000 and needed more administrative staff and a bigger headquarters. Further increases in the size and responsibilities of the force required even more administrators and space. Therefore, new buildings were constructed and completed in 1906 and 1940, so that New Scotland Yard became a three-building complex. (). The first two buildings are now a Grade I listed structure known as the Norman Shaw Buildings.

10 Broadway

The former New Scotland Yard building in Victoria Street

The headquarters of the Metropolitan Police were moved to 8–10 Broadway in 1967, in a new building constructed on a site that also bordered onto Victoria Street.

In 2008, the Metropolitan Police Authority (MPA) bought the freehold of 10 Broadway for around £120 million.

10 Broadway was sold to the Abu Dhabi Financial Group in December 2014 for £370 million, and redevelopment plans for a six-building, mixed-use development were approved in February 2016. Ownership was officially passed from the MPA to the Abu Dhabi Financial Group when the relocation was completed on 31 October 2016;

Current location

The current site of New Scotland Yard, formerly the [[Curtis Green Building

In May 2013, the Metropolitan Police confirmed that the New Scotland Yard building on Broadway would be sold and the force's headquarters would be moved back to the Curtis Green Building on the Victoria Embankment. A competition was announced for architects to redesign the building prior to the Metropolitan Police moving to it in 2015. This building previously housed the Territorial Policing headquarters and is adjacent to the original New Scotland Yard (Norman Shaw North Building).

Rotating sign

In December 2015, construction work on the exterior of the Curtis Green building was completed. On 31 October 2016, the Metropolitan Police staff left the building at 10 Broadway and moved to their new headquarters. The new New Scotland Yard building was to have been opened by Queen Elizabeth II on 23 March 2017, but that same day it was announced that the Royal opening would be postponed, due to the preceding day's terrorist attack at Westminster. The opening was re-arranged for 13 July 2017. Like all three of its predecessors it houses the Met's Crime Museum (formerly known as the Black Museum), founded in 1874, a collection of criminal memorabilia not open to the public.

References

References

  1. "History of the Metropolitan Police Service". Metropolitan Police Service.
  2. Newton, Stephen Leslie. (1992). "German/English Lexicographical Contrasts: City, Queen (quean), Yard". University of California, Berkeley.
  3. Farnsworth, Clyde H.. (15 May 1964). "Move is planned by Scotland Yard". The New York Times.
  4. (15 March 2012). "The Story of Soho: The Windmill Years 1932–1964".
  5. (20 May 2013). "New Metropolitan Police HQ announced as Curtis Green Building". BBC News.
  6. "GOVERNMENT OFFICES, MINISTRY OF AGRICULTURE FISHERIES AND FOOD GOVERNMENT OFFICES, MINISTRY OF AGRICULTURE FISHERIES AND FOOD WEST BLOCK". Historic England.
  7. [[John Moylan]], ''Scotland Yard and the Metropolitan Police'', 1929, pp. 93–4
  8. Ackerman, Naomi. (9 December 2019). "First look: Scotland Yard hotel opens after revamp". Evening Standard.
  9. "Great Scotland Yard Hotel". [[Hyatt]].
  10. Davenport, Justin. (30 October 2012). "Metropolitan Police to sell New Scotland Yard". Evening Standard.
  11. Curry, Rhiannon. (24 February 2016). "Green light to demolish New Scotland Yard to make way for flats". [[The Daily Telegraph]].
  12. Rowlinson, Liz. (18 October 2019). "Prime property buyers return to Westminster". [[Financial Times]].
  13. (20 May 2013). "Met confirms Scotland Yard to be sold". [[The Australian]].
  14. (1 December 2016). "New Met HQ officially completed, with police to move in by end of next year". Get West London.
  15. (1 November 2016). "Metropolitan Police staff move out of New Scotland Yard after 49 years". Evening Standard.
  16. Patel, Salina. (23 March 2017). "Royal opening of new Met Police HQ postponed following London terrorist attack: The Queen and Duke of Edinburgh were due to visit New Scotland Yard today". Trinity Mirror Southern.
  17. Grafton-Green, Patrick. (13 July 2017). "The Queen comes face-to-face with bomb disposal robot and arsenal of weapons on tour of Scotland Yard's new HQ".
  18. "The Crime Museum". Metropolitan Police.
  19. Begg, ''Jack the Ripper: The Definitive History'', p. 205; Evans and Rumbelow, pp. 84–85
  20. "Sherlock Holmes and Dr Watson in the 21st century: it's elementary". The Guardian.
  21. (2020). "Noir in the North Genre, Politics and Place". Bloomsbury Publishing.
  22. "Wilkie Collins, The Moonstone". British Library.
  23. "Robert Louis Stevenson's Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde". British Library.
  24. "Blackmail (1929)". British Film Institute.
  25. "Monty Python's 10 funniest sketches". [[The Daily Telegraph]].
  26. Ellison, Cara. (12 November 2013). "Professor Layton and The Azran Legacy – review". The Guardian.
  27. Hicks, Chris. (3 August 2006). "'V for Vendetta' leads list of latest releases". Deseret News.
  28. (10 June 2019). "Watch Dogs: Legion – Hack, Fight, and Sneak as Anyone to Take Back London – E3 2019". Ubisoft.
  29. PTI. (2019-09-26). "Goal is to keep going to finish new 8-book series: Jeffrey Archer". The Hindu.
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