Talk:50 Queen Anne's Gate

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Shame, the building seemed suited for the Home Office. I liked to imagine that the lower floors were used for those in a domestic observation role (because they seem to peer emotionless down onto the street), the floors of the main central stalk for routine process and administrative roles, the stuck-out floors for the high-ups (because they're prominent), and the upper floors for hush-hush stuff and secret meetings (because you can't see them from the ground). - Keith D. Tyler ΒΆ 22:54, 6 October 2005 (UTC)

I always thought it rather looked like a giant version of those guard towers you have in maximum security prisons. And it does very appositely convey the massive, implacable solidity of the State. What would you want as a headquarters for your internal security department - a Swiss chateau? :D Keithlard 23:07, 6 October 2005 (UTC)

The Queen Anne's Mansions it replaced sounds intriguing: a Victorian high-rise! Does anyone have any further info, or pictures? FrFintonStack 02:25, 29 March 2006 (UTC)