I'm sure many of those who browsed through the Art Deco Elements album* were fascinated by this statue**:
It decorates the entrance to the National Audit Office, Buckingham Palace Rd., London.
Of course the winged persons holding an arrowhead-shaped device are not auditors. But who are they?
These Dieselpunk angels are guarding the beautiful structure that was built right before WWII as a terminal for Imperial Airways, the predecessor of present-day British Airways.
The building looks rather unimpressive on a dull London day:
But it is by no means lost on the city skyline.
And when the weather is fine it's simply awesome:
It's not easy to find some solid info on this building. Finally I found a short article by Chris Taylor in his appropriately named (and highly recommended) Empire Airways blog:
The terminal is a lengthy facility stretching from 157-197 Buckingham Palace Road (Westminster SW1), and was completed in 1939. It is strategically located adjacent to major road and rail connections, lying across the street from Victoria Coach Station and backing onto the railheads leading into London Victoria train station.
This ideal situation allowed mail, freight and passengers to congregate at the Empire Terminal, then be shipped to Southampton via rail, where they would be loaded into the flying boats and dispatched to the far corners of the earth.
Despite the general decline of flying boats in the postwar era, Imperial’s successor companies—BOAC and British Airways—continued to operate the terminal into the late 20th century. In this 1978 image, the British Airways tail flash is visible atop the terminal’s central clock tower. At some point, BA management sold off the terminal and consolidated its offices elsewhere. I am a little hard-pressed to comprehend how BA could easily surrender such priceless architectural and corporate heritage—with its predecessor’s logo painstakingly wrought from the very stone above the entrance—to any other body, regardless of how worthy. Although given the state of Ford’s original Model T plant in Highland Park, Detroit, I suppose I should not be surprised.
Today, the Empire Terminal is home to the UK’s National Audit Office, an independent parliamentary body that reports to the Comptroller and Auditor General" (unquote).
I must add that C-Class flying boats mentioned by Mr. Taylor are no less fascinating than the terminal:As many Diesel Era objects, the building can be seen as bright (utopian) and dark (dystopian), depending on who looks and when. Here are some night shots found at an interesting London forum:





Image credits: FrMark, Jamie Barras, Ronald Hackston, Thomas_Ashley @ Flickr & © 2008 downfallen (R.I.P.)
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* Originally published by lnago @ Dieselpunks LJ community
** by mermaid99 @ Flickr, cropped
Comment
Nice to see my photos appreciated - yes, the weather was dismal and I have been intending to return on a sunnier day!
FrMark
© 2012 Created by Tome Wilson.
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