Holy Trinity Church Marylebone

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Holy Trinity Church Marylebone, Westminster, London is a former Anglican church, built in 1828 by Sir John Soane. In 1818 parliament passed an act setting aside one million pounds to celebrate the defeat of Napoleon. This is one of the so-called "Waterloo churches" that were built with the money. It has an external pulpit facing onto Marylebone Road, and an entrance resembling the acropolis. There is a lantern steeple, similar to St Pancras New Church, which is also on Euston Road to the east.

By the 1930s it fallen into disuse and in 1936 was used by the newly-founded Penguin Books company to store books. A children's slide was used to deliver books from the street into the large crypt. In 1937 they moved out to Harmondsworth, and SPCK moved in. It was their headquarters until 2006, when they relocated to Turton Street, near Westminster. The church is now disused. There are currently proposals to turn it into a shopping mall. It stands on a traffic island to itself, bounded by Marylebone Road at the front, and Albany Street and Osnaburgh Street on either side. The street at the rear has no name.