Here on CabbieBlog, we’ve done many Christmas quizzes, so for a complete change, this month’s quiz title is Hiding In Plain Sight. As before the correct answer will turn green when it’s clicked upon and expanded to give more information. The incorrect answers will turn red giving the correct explanation.
1. Which famous scientist has a very large memorial at a major road junction?
John Logie Baird
WRONG The stainless steel box-shaped structure, located on the Elephant and Castle gyratory system, designed by modern movement architect Rodney Gordon in 1959, commemorates Michael Faraday’s importance as a scientist and was placed there because Faraday’s birthplace is nearby in Newington Butts.
Michael Faraday
CORRECT The stainless steel box-shaped structure, located on the Elephant and Castle gyratory system, designed by modern movement architect Rodney Gordon in 1959, commemorates Michael Faraday’s importance as a scientist and was placed there because Faraday’s birthplace is nearby in Newington Butts.
Tim Berners-Lee
WRONG The stainless steel box-shaped structure, located on the Elephant and Castle gyratory system, designed by modern movement architect Rodney Gordon in 1959, commemorates Michael Faraday’s importance as a scientist and was placed there because Faraday’s birthplace is nearby in Newington Butts.
2. Near which park would you find a ‘secret’ command and control centre with a 20ft thick concrete roof?
Regent’s Park
WRONG Described by Sir Winston Churchill as a ‘vast monstrosity which weighs upon the Horse Guards Parade’, the Admiralty Citadel is now covered by Boston Ivy in an apparent attempt to soften the harsh appearance of this vast concrete edifice.
St James’s Park
CORRECT Described by Sir Winston Churchill as a ‘vast monstrosity which weighs upon the Horse Guards Parade’, the Admiralty Citadel is now covered by Boston Ivy in an apparent attempt to soften the harsh appearance of this vast concrete edifice.
Hyde Park
WRONG Described by Sir Winston Churchill as a ‘vast monstrosity which weighs upon the Horse Guards Parade’, the Admiralty Citadel is now covered by Boston Ivy in an apparent attempt to soften the harsh appearance of this vast concrete edifice.
3. Once used as the Port of London Authority’s headquarters, but where is this huge building?
Trinity Square
CORRECT Now a Four Seasons Hotel, 10 Trinity Square was the Port of London Authority, more than 1,200 people each day came to pay port dues for all the boats that were arriving in London. Such was the importance of this building that, in 1946, the General Assembly of the United Nations held its inaugural reception here.
St. Katherine’s Dock
WRONG Now a Four Seasons Hotel, 10 Trinity Square was the Port of London Authority, more than 1,200 people each day came to pay port dues for all the boats that were arriving in London. Such was the importance of this building that, in 1946, the General Assembly of the United Nations held its inaugural reception here.
East Smithfield
WRONG Now a Four Seasons Hotel, 10 Trinity Square was the Port of London Authority, more than 1,200 people each day came to pay port dues for all the boats that were arriving in London. Such was the importance of this building that, in 1946, the General Assembly of the United Nations held its inaugural reception here.
4. Where is the 287-foot-tall Queen’s Tower?
South Kensington
CORRECT Clad in Portland stone and topped by a copper-covered dome, Queen’s Tower in South Kensington is all that remains of the Imperial Institute which was 700 feet long, built to mark Queen Victoria’s Golden Jubilee in 1887. She wasn’t amused as it spoiled her view.
Hyde Park
WRONG Clad in Portland stone and topped by a copper-covered dome, Queen’s Tower in South Kensington is all that remains of the Imperial Institute which was 700 feet long, built to mark Queen Victoria’s Golden Jubilee in 1887. She wasn’t amused as it spoiled her view.
St. James’s Park
WRONG Clad in Portland stone and topped by a copper-covered dome, Queen’s Tower in South Kensington is all that remains of the Imperial Institute which was 700 feet long, built to mark Queen Victoria’s Golden Jubilee in 1887. She wasn’t amused as it spoiled her view.
5. Situated here since the 14th century, Custom House once had a riverfront of nearly 500ft. Which road does it stand on?
Lower Thames Street
CORRECT Formerly used for the collection of customs duties, today the Custom House is used by His Majesty’s Revenue and Customs and stands on 20 Lower Thames Street should you feel obliged to visit.
Lower Ground
WRONG Formerly used for the collection of customs duties, today the Custom House is used by His Majesty’s Revenue and Customs and stands on 20 Lower Thames Street should you feel obliged to visit.
Victoria Embankment
WRONG Formerly used for the collection of customs duties, today the Custom House is used by His Majesty’s Revenue and Customs and stands on 20 Lower Thames Street should you feel obliged to visit.
6. What ‘top secret’ tower was visible across most of London?
The Shard
WRONG Londoners were not expected to notice the 621ft high BT Tower, for many years it did not appear on any map as its location was protected by the Official Secrets Act, and even the taking and storing photographs of the building was forbidden.
BT Tower
CORRECT Londoners were not expected to notice the 621ft high BT Tower, for many years it did not appear on any map as its location was protected by the Official Secrets Act, and even the taking and storing photographs of the building was forbidden.
Canary Wharf
WRONG Londoners were not expected to notice the 621ft high BT Tower, for many years it did not appear on any map as its location was protected by the Official Secrets Act, and even the taking and storing photographs of the building was forbidden.
7. Which building advertises Baron Justus von Liebig’s invention?
Michelin House
WRONG The Oxo Company wanted to advertise their product to Londoners but local authorities were adverse to outside advertising, so Albert Moore, the company’s architect when adding a tower atop their cold store produced a 10ft tall artwork created by piercing holes through the wall, one an X shape and two on either side forming circles. The local authority accepted this as building decoration rather than advertising, giving us the Oxo tower we know today.
Royal Daulton, Southbank House
WRONG The Oxo Company wanted to advertise their product to Londoners but local authorities were adverse to outside advertising, so Albert Moore, the company’s architect when adding a tower atop their cold store produced a 10ft tall artwork created by piercing holes through the wall, one an X shape and two on either side forming circles. The local authority accepted this as building decoration rather than advertising, giving us the Oxo tower we know today.
OXO Tower
CORRECT The Oxo Company wanted to advertise their product to Londoners but local authorities were adverse to outside advertising, so Albert Moore, the company’s architect when adding a tower atop their cold store produced a 10ft tall artwork created by piercing holes through the wall, one an X shape and two on either side forming circles. The local authority accepted this as building decoration rather than advertising, giving us the Oxo tower we know today.
8. The Dazzle camouflage was applied to which London structure?
Battersea Power Station
WRONG Before it was moved to Chatham to make way for the Thames Tideway Tunnel, Dazzle camouflage was applied to the HMS President as part of the World War I centenary art commissions. Intended to optically distort the view of a ship at sea and make the vessel harder to locate and attack, the 2014 painting of the ship in this style was by the artist Tobia Rehberger.
Tower Bridge
WRONG Before it was moved to Chatham to make way for the Thames Tideway Tunnel, Dazzle camouflage was applied to the HMS President as part of the World War I centenary art commissions. Intended to optically distort the view of a ship at sea and make the vessel harder to locate and attack, the 2014 painting of the ship in this style was by the artist Tobia Rehberger.
HMS President
CORRECT Before it was moved to Chatham to make way for the Thames Tideway Tunnel, Dazzle camouflage was applied to the HMS President as part of the World War I centenary art commissions. Intended to optically distort the view of a ship at sea and make the vessel harder to locate and attack, the 2014 painting of the ship in this style was by the artist Tobia Rehberger.
9. What important function did the social housing flats in Pear Tree House at Upper Norwood have?
Nuclear shelter
CORRECT Built during the Cold War, the 18-room nuclear bunker with its bomb-proof double doors and flats above was completed in 1966 and the bunker went into care and maintenance when civil defence was stood down two years later.
Water pumping station
WRONG Built during the Cold War, the 18-room nuclear bunker with its bomb-proof double doors and flats above was completed in 1966 and the bunker went into care and maintenance when civil defence was stood down two years later.
Early warning station
WRONG Built during the Cold War, the 18-room nuclear bunker with its bomb-proof double doors and flats above was completed in 1966 and the bunker went into care and maintenance when civil defence was stood down two years later.
10. What do Sid James and Laurence Oliver have in common?
They spied for Britain in Elstree Studios
WRONG Sid James, Laurence Olivier, Stanley Kubrick, the Duke of Edinburgh, Stephen Fry and Kate Moss have all used a black cab as personal transport to remain anonymous.
Driving a black cab protected their anonymity
CORRECT Sid James, Laurence Olivier, Stanley Kubrick, the Duke of Edinburgh, Stephen Fry and Kate Moss have all used a black cab as personal transport to remain anonymous.
They acted secret signals during filming
WRONG Sid James, Laurence Olivier, Stanley Kubrick, the Duke of Edinburgh, Stephen Fry and Kate Moss have all used a black cab as personal transport to remain anonymous.
10 correct today (one was a guess), I knew the others. A good set of questions for me this morning. 🙂
Cheers, Pete.
LikeLike
It took me hours trying to think up these 10 questions, only for you to get them all right!
LikeLiked by 1 person
I did luckily guess the OXO Tower, I had never heard of the man. But I have had a meal there. 🙂
LikeLike
I once returned a camera to a diner in the OXO Restaurant and didn’t even get an acknowledgement
LikeLiked by 1 person