Arthur Penhaligon sat in the library, watching the rain blur the headlights on the street below. He was the last of his kind, a man whose family had held the keys to No. 32 since the Victorian era. But the city was changing. Outside those windows, the "Big Bang" of the financial markets had transformed the neighborhood into a playground for a new kind of wealth—one that preferred glass towers and digital tickers over velvet curtains and oil paintings.
"The surveyors will be here at noon, Arthur," his sister, Eleanor, said from the doorway. She was already dressed for the city, her shoulder pads sharp enough to cut glass. Park Lane No 32 (1989)
The year 1989 was a season of shifting tectonic plates for London’s elite. At , the heavy mahogany doors stood as the last line of defense against the neon-lit rush of the late eighties. Inside, the air tasted of expensive cigar smoke and the faint, metallic tang of the nearby Underground. Arthur Penhaligon sat in the library, watching the
"They’ll call it 'redevelopment,'" Arthur replied without turning. "But we both know it’s an autopsy." But the city was changing
: During the late 1980s, many historic London properties underwent significant transitions as the financial sector boomed. You can explore more about the history of the area and its Grade II listed buildings via Historic England .
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