When completed in 1978, it was the largest telephone exchange in Europe. Riverbank House was next door to the east. The architectural style was not unlike the
Royal National Theatre. The International Control Centre was officially opened on 3 May 1984.
Construction It was built on the churchyard of the former
All-Hallows-the-Great on
Upper Thames Street (
A3211). It was built on a 2.5-acre site. It cost £18m, with £11m for the telecommunications equipment. In September 1971,
Plessey Telecommunications was given a £10m contract. It had the
TXK type of switching equipment. The site was planned to open in 1975 but opened in 1978. It was only by the mid to late 1980s that the building was fully fitted. By this time, the immense amount of analogue telecommunications equipment being fitted was becoming obsolete.
Closure BT closed the site on 31 December 2004. It was demolished in August 2006.
Watermark Place City Office Retail Estates and
Oxford Properties co-developed the old Mondial House site with a mixed-use complex designed by Fletcher Priest Architects. The building now known as "Watermark Place" began construction in 2007 and was completed in 2009. The complex is located along the Thames between
Cannon Street station and Fishmonger Hall. ==Function==