On the west side of the square, 10 Finsbury Square is a 150,000 sq ft office building built in 2014. It is occupied by the
London Metal Exchange. The north side of the square is largely occupied by Triton Court at 14–18 Finsbury Square, a steel-frame constructed office building originally built during the first three decades of the twentieth century, along with Royal London House (22–25 Finsbury Square) which dates from the 1950s. The east of the square is occupied by
Grant Thornton accountants and auditors at 30 Finsbury Square, and the University of Liverpool in London at 33 Finsbury Square. In November 2019, City, University of London announced that it had acquired 33 Finsbury Square on a lease. The university's
Bayes Business School (formerly Cass Business School) will occupy the building, as well as significantly remodelling its Bunhill Row campus. The south of the square is City Gate House, 39–45 Finsbury Square. Finsbury Square is also the venue for an occasional farmers' market.
Royal London House and Triton Court The buildings on the north side of the square were built over the first half of the twentieth century to serve as headquarters for what is now the
Royal London Group; collectively they were known as Royal London House. The oldest (westernmost) section (with its
cupola and clock on the corner with City Road) dates from 1904 to 1905 and was built by
John Belcher as headquarters for the Royal London Friendly Society; over the next ten years this building was extended eastwards by four bays. The adjacent, taller section, with its prominent tower-cum-spire, dates from 1929 to 1930; it was built by Belcher's former partner,
J. J. Joass, to form an expanded headquarters for the Royal London Mutual Assurance Society. (A contemporary extension to the north of the
Edwardian block was also built by Joass.) Finally, the whole complex was extended eastwards again in the 1950s with the addition of a block by the architect H. Bramhill. In the 1980s, the older (pre-1940s) buildings were all comprehensively redeveloped, by
Sheppard Robson & Partners, to form a new office complex: Triton Court. The interiors were gutted and rebuilt, but the
façades were retained, albeit with the addition of a double-height
mansard roof and the insertion of a new entrance arch through the four-bay extension to the original Edwardian block. These are now the only remaining pre-World War II buildings in the square. After the completion of Triton Court, the 1950s block alone was left with the designation Royal London House. This was sold to Indonesian real estate conglomerate
Sinar Mas Land in 2015. At around the same time the 1950s block, Royal London House, was converted into
The Montcalm Hotel (completed in 2016). ==References==