stained-glass window There are eight
listed buildings of the street, including:
Lavers and Barraud stained-glass studio The Jewell and Withers Building at 22 Endell Street is a
Grade II listed building. Located on the corner of Betterton Street and Endell Street, the polychromatic brick-and-stone
Gothic Revival structure, cited as an early example of the style, was designed as a studio for the stained-glass firm
Lavers and Barraud in 1859, and is included, together with the attached cast-iron railings, on the National Heritage register. The crow-step gable, facing Betterton Street, has a significant contemporary artwork by painter
Brian Clarke, in the form of a three-light stained-glass window. The Post-modern artwork, which references the building's original function as a stained-glass studio, was commissioned as part of the 1981 refurbishment of the building, undertaken by architects Rock Townsend. The artwork was part-funded by the British
Crafts Council, and fabricated in Germany under Clarke's supervision. It was installed in 1981, and was notably designed to be equally visually effective both by night and by day, making graphic use of complex leading, and deploying different types of mouth-blown glass to particular effect.
Cross Keys public house The
Cross Keys public house at No.31, constructed in 1848–49, is a Grade II listed building.
Latchfords Timber Yard The nineteenth-century Latchfords Timber Yard and attached timber sheds at No.61 are Grade II listed.
Swiss Protestant Church The Swiss Protestant Church at No.79 was designed by
George Vulliamy and built 1853–4. It is also Grade II listed. ==Inhabitants==