What did Green plaque № 42173 do at 70 Southampton Row?


The Story
# 70 Southampton Row Standing before 70 Southampton Row, you're looking at the nerve centre of British electrical engineering education for nearly seven decades. From June 1903 onwards, Faraday House Electrical Engineering College transformed this building into a crucible of innovation, training generations of engineers who would wire Britain's cities, design its power stations, and pioneer its electrical infrastructure during the twentieth century's most transformative period. Within these walls, students studied the revolutionary principles that had only recently emerged from laboratory theory into practical application, learning hands-on skills that would make them architects of the modern age. The fact that this institution persisted here for 64 years—through two world wars, through the birth of commercial electricity, through the electrification of London itself—speaks to how essential this address became to British engineering: Faraday House wasn't simply documenting electrical progress, it was creating the engineers who made that progress possible, making this seemingly ordinary Victorian building one of the hidden engines behind London's transformation into a modern metropolis.
Location
70 Southampton Row