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Slums, Stones and a serial killer – the fascinating history of Denmark Street

Giaconda Cafe is now a steak restaurant - Credit: Matthew Chattle / Alamy Stock Photo
Giaconda Cafe is now a steak restaurant - Credit: Matthew Chattle / Alamy Stock Photo

Earlier this year it was reported that an apartment in Centre Point had probably become, at £5 million, the most expensive student flat in the world. A snip, however, compared to the penthouse at the top which was on the market for £55 million.

Centre Point, the 117m high building on the junction of Tottenham Court Road, Charing Cross Road and Oxford Street, is situated on the edge of an area known as St Giles. A part of London immortalised by Hogarth’s Gin Lane and once the location of the worst London ‘rookery’ – an old colloquial term given to the most appalling of the city’s slums. By the 19th century the St Giles’ rookery was possibly the worst slum in Britain. Open sewers ran through the homes of thieves, prostitutes and the poorest of the poor. Peter Ackroyd in London: A Biography wrote that “the Rookeries embodied the worst living conditions in all of London's history; this was the lowest point which human beings could reach”.

St Giles was London's poorest district - Credit: GETTY
St Giles was London's poorest district Credit: GETTY

The beginning of the end of the infamous St Giles’ rookery came in 1847 when New Oxford Street, as part of major slum clearing, was driven right through the parish to join Oxford Street with Holborn. A hundred years later it was the congestion at the junction of New Oxford Street with Tottenham Court Road (known as St Giles’ Circus) which, indirectly, brought us Centre Point – a building that came to symbolise the greed and rapacity of the post-war property boom perhaps even before it was built.

A few years after the Second World War, and to help with the rapidly increasing traffic flow, London County Council wanted to build a roundabout at St Giles’s Circus and also ‘rationalise’ the surrounding area. The council, however, was only allowed to offer compensation to property owners at pre-war values which meant that no one was willing to sell. In 1959 the developer Harry Hyams, via the architect Richard Siefert, let it be known that he could buy the land for the roundabout if the LCC would agree to planning permission to build around and over the top of it. It was thought by the council that this could be a relatively simple way to solve a rather complicated problem, and they agreed to the proposal.

After running rings around a confused LCC, the pipe-smoking Colonel Richard Siefert, along with the structural engineer Wilhelm Frischmann (father of Elastica’s Justine), were somehow allowed to create a building an unprecedented 34 storeys high. Centre Point became London’s first bona fide skyscraper. It’s been said that Seifert did more to alter the London skyline than any architect since Sir Christopher Wren.

Centre Point was the capital's first bona fide skyscraper - Credit: GETTY
Centre Point was the capital's first bona fide skyscraper Credit: GETTY

The building’s construction began in 1963 and was completed three years later. Although, controversially, it remained empty for years with Hyams insisting he would only commit to what he called “a single tenant on undoubted covenant”. In reality, at a time of rapidly increasing property prices, Hyams knew that as long as Centre Point stayed unoccupied it remained a highly disposable and valuable asset.

The vast tower soon gained the nickname “London’s Empty Skyscraper” and the first organised protests took place in 1969. Calling the building an affront to the homeless the protestors unfurled a banner declaring “Cathy Come to Centre Point”.

Protesters in the Sixties - Credit: GETTY
Protesters in the Sixties Credit: GETTY

The following year the Kinks sang about Denmark Street that was “shakin’ from the tapping of toes and where you could hear music play anytime on any day, every rhythm, every way”. Denmark Street - a road in St Giles a stone’s throw from Centre Point - had been a musical road since early in the 20th century thanks to its convenient location next to London’s West End theatres. Both the UK’s famous music magazines, Melody Maker at number 19 and the New Music Express at number 5, began publishing there. At number 20 Elton John, in 1965 just eighteen and still plain old Reg Dwight, worked as an office boy for one of the large music publishers Mills Music. Paid just £5 per week he could not possibly have dreamt that within eight years he would be responsible for an incredible two per cent of the World’s entire record sales.

In 1965 the American folk singer Paul Simon walked into the same Mills Music with two songs he had recently written, The Sound of Silence and Homeward Bound. Unfortunately homeward bound was exactly where the man responsible for listening to new music sent him after rejecting the songs for being uncommercial and too complicated. After being turned down Simon decided to start his own publishing company called Charing Cross Music and has subsequently, and sensibly, kept the rights to all his music ever since.

A couple of years before, in November 1963, The Rolling Stones made some demo recordings at Regent Sounds studio in Denmark Street – mostly new songs they had recently been practising and playing during their nationwide tour. The band loved the sound of the primitive, cramped studio that used actual egg-cartons as soundproofing and in January 1964 they recorded, on the two-track revox recorder, their first LP called, simply, The Rolling Stones.

The Stones in 1963 - Credit: GETTY
The Stones in 1963 Credit: GETTY

In February they started recording Buddy Holly’s Not Fade Away but in the middle of a gruelling tour the group were tired and fractious and had almost given up on the track. Andrew Oldham, their manager and producer, phoned his friend Gene Pitney, the American music star who was currently in London, for inspiration.

Pitney turned up but also brought along the producer Phil Spector, who was at the height of his fame and had in the preceding year produced Da Doo Ron Ron and Then He Kissed Me by The Crystals and Be My Baby and Baby, I Love You by The Ronettes. The Americans were armed with several bottles of inspiring brandy and the mood, not surprisingly, turned much for the better. Not Fade Away was at last recorded. Phil Spector is listed as playing the maracas on the recording, although in reality his instrument was an empty cognac bottle hit with a half-crown coin.

The Beverley Sisters at Denmark Street in the 1950s - Credit: GETTY
The Beverley Sisters at Denmark Street in the 1950s Credit: GETTY

At number 9 in Denmark Street was the Giaconda Cafe, a mod hang-out and where David Bowie met his first backing band: the Lower Third. It was also where he met Vince Taylor, known mostly these days for his song Brand New Cadillac, later covered by The Clash on London Calling, but also the man that inspired Ziggy Stardust. David Bowie in an interview with Alan Yentob once spoke of Taylor:

“I met (Vince Taylor) a few times in the mid-Sixties and I went to a few parties with him. He was out of his gourd. Totally flipped. The guy was not playing with a full deck at all. He used to carry maps of Europe around with him, and I remember him opening a map outside Charing Cross tube station, putting it on the pavement and kneeling down with a magnifying glass. He pointed out all the sites where UFOs were going to land. He was the inspiration for Ziggy...” After spending too much of his life in prisons and psychiatric institutions while pretty much continually ‘out of his gourd’, Vince Taylor died in 1991 in Switzerland at the age of 52.

Vince Taylor at Soho's 2i's coffee bar - Credit: GETTY
Vince Taylor at Soho's 2i's coffee bar Credit: GETTY

By the mid-1970s the Giaconda snack bar had become a punk hang-out with groups such as The Clash and The Slits wasting their hours drinking tea. A few doors down from the cafe the Sex Pistols rehearsed and lived in a grotty flat above a shop at number 6 (they eventually left after struggling to find the measly £4 weekly rent).

Denis Nilson, the infamous serial killer who murdered at least 15 men in his North London flat in the late 1970s and early 1980s, worked at the Job Centre at 1 Denmark Street for several years. In 1980, which would have been right in the middle of his killing spree, he offered to help with the food for the office Christmas party and brought along a large saucepan. Former colleagues only realised during the trial that this was the same saucepan that had been used to boil the heads of several of his victims.

The Denmark Street Job Centre - Credit: GETTY
The Denmark Street Job Centre Credit: GETTY

In 1973 it became known that Centre Point’s estimated value was now worth £20 million. This meant it had become the most profitable London property ever and made it even more controversial. A few months later, in January 1974, protesters managed to actually get inside the building after two of them had managed to get jobs as security guards. One of the squatters described the building as “the concrete symbol of everything that is rotten about our society”. The protest, which actually only lasted a couple of days, went on to inspire the name Centrepoint for a new homeless charity that still exists today.

By the 1990s many Londoners started to appreciate the aesthetic qualites of Centre Point and in 1995 it was made a Grade II-listed building with the Royal Fine Art Commission praising Colonel Seifert’s building as having an ‘elegance worthy of a Wren steeple’.

The musical heritage lingers - Credit: GETTY
The musical heritage lingers Credit: GETTY

With the construction of London’s 12th tube line - the Elizabeth Line due to open at the end of 2019 - the area around Centre Point has been completely redeveloped. But the building itself is again courting controversy, and for exactly the same reason as it did 50 years ago. At a time of housing problems and homelessness the developer that has turned Centre Point into luxury apartments has reportedly given up trying to sell the flats. After receiving too many “detached from reality” low offers they have decided to leave the building partially unoccupied. Centre Point can again return to its old nickname, this time slightly amended: “London’s Half Empty Skyscraper”.

If you’d like to hang out where David Bowie, Vince Taylor, the Small Faces, the Clash and countless other bands spent hours of their time, the Giaconda Café at 9 Denmark Street is now the Flat Iron steak restaurant.

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