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© Andreas Schmidt | Battersea Power Station

Battersea Power Station

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Time Out says

A Grade II-listed Art Deco masterpiece, and Europe's largest brick building, Battersea Power Station is a London icon that has appeared in films such as Alfred Hitchcock's 'Sabotage' and Monty Python's 'The Meaning of Life', episodes of 'Doctor Who' and, perhaps most famously, on the cover of Pink Floyd's 1977 album 'Animals'. But it has grown ever more derelict since it finally stopped producing electricity for the capital in 1983 – and is a graveyard for a succession of redevelopment schemes. Things could be looking up for this much-loved building, however. The latest plans for the 40-acre site include thousands of new homes, shops, a new park and an extension of London Underground's Northern line.

Details

Address
Footpath beneath Grosvenor Bridge
SW8 4NN
Transport:
Rail: Battersea Park
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What’s on

Planetarium Go!

With the mighty Greenwich Planetarium out of action for a couple of years, various smaller alternatives appear to be taking this moment to pop up around London, including this one at Battersea Power Station. Running throughout February – including, cruciually, half-term – Planetarium Go! offers the usual 360 degree screen and will show 20-30-minute films designed to fill an all-ages audience with ‘cosmic wonder’.
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