Piccadilly Circus is surrounded by tourist attractions, including the
Shaftesbury Memorial,
Criterion Theatre, London Pavilion and retail stores. Nightclubs, restaurants and bars are located in the area and neighbouring
Soho, including the former
Chinawhite club. of Piccadilly Circus in 2015 from the southern side in front of
Lillywhites Illuminated signs Piccadilly Circus was surrounded by illuminated advertising hoardings on buildings, starting in 1908 with a
Perrier sign, but only one building now carries them, the one in the northwestern corner between Shaftesbury Avenue and Glasshouse Street. The site is unnamed (usually referred to as "Monico" after the
Café Monico, which used to be on the site); its addresses are 44/48 Regent Street, 1/6 Sherwood Street, 17/22 Denman Street and 1/17
Shaftesbury Avenue, and it has been owned by property investor
Land Securities Group since the 1970s. The earliest signs used
incandescent light bulbs; these were replaced with
neon lights and with moving signs (there was a large
Guinness clock at one time). The first neon sign was for the British meat extract
Bovril. From December 1998,
digital projectors were used for the Coke sign, the square's first digital billboard, while in the 2000s there was a gradual move to
LED displays, which completely replaced neon lamps by 2011. The number of signs has reduced over the years as the rental costs have increased, and in January 2017 the six remaining
advertising screens were switched off as part of their combination into one large ultra-high definition curved
Daktronics display, turning the signs off during renovation for the longest time since the 1940s. On 26 October 2017, the new screen was switched on for the first time. advertisement with their
slogan, "Guinness is good for you", at Piccadilly Circus in 1942. The
Bovril sign was installed in 1910. Until the 2017 refurbishment, the site had six LED advertising screens above three large retail units facing Piccadilly Circus on the north side, occupied by
Boots,
Gap and a mix of smaller retail, restaurant and office premises fronting the other streets. A
Burger King located under the Samsung advert, which had been a
Wimpy Bar until 1989, closed in early 2008 and was converted into a
Barclays bank. •
Coca-Cola has had a sign at Piccadilly Circus since 1954. In September 2003, the previous digital projector board and the site that had been occupied by
Nescafé was replaced with a state-of-the-art LED video display that curves round with the building. Before Nescafé, a neon advertisement for
Foster's occupied the spot from 1987 until 1999, and from 1978 to 1987 it was used by
Philips Electronics. For several months in 2002, the Nescafé sign was replaced by a sign featuring the quote "Imagine all the people living life in peace" (from the song "
Imagine") by former
Beatle John Lennon. This was paid for by his widow
Yoko Ono, who spent an estimated £150,000 to display an advert at this location. Coca-Cola, Diet Coke, Coca-Cola Zero, Fanta, Sprite and Vitamin Water have all been advertised in the space. •
Hyundai Motors sign launched on 29 September 2011. It replaced a sign for
Sanyo which had occupied the space since around early 1988 (slightly modified in 2004), the last to be run using neon lights rather than Hyundai's computerised LED screen. Earlier Sanyo signs with older logos had occupied the position since 1978, although these were only half the size of the later space. •
McDonald's added its sign in 1987, replacing one for
BASF. The sign was changed from neon to LED in 2001. A bigger, brighter screen was installed by Daktronics in 2008. in March 2020 •
Samsung added its sign in November 1994, the space having been previously occupied by
Canon Inc. (1978–84) and
Panasonic (1984–94). The sign was changed from neon to LED in summer 2005. The screen was upgraded and improved in autumn 2011. •
L'Oreal, Hunter Original and
eBay both had signs in the Piccadilly circus billboards since October 2017. • One Piccadilly, the highest resolution of all the LED displays was installed by Daktronics, in late 2013, underneath the Samsung and McDonald's signs. It allowed other companies to advertise for both short- and long-term leases, increasing the amount of advertising space but using the same screen for multiple brands. Prior to this an earlier, smaller LED screen called
Piccadilly Lite occupied the space from 3 December 2007 to 2013. The space has also been occupied by
JVC (1978–84),
Carlsberg (1984–2003) and
Budweiser (2003–07). • The Curve, a similar space to One Piccadilly, was added in 2015, replacing a space previously occupied by
Schweppes (1920–61),
BP (1961–67),
Cinzano (1967–78),
Fujifilm (1978–86),
Kodak (1986–90) and
TDK (1990–2015).
Burberry was using the space as of December 2015. •
LG was added in February 2007 on the roof of Coventry House, which diagonally faces Piccadilly Circus. Its sign is a large LED video advertising display for LGE, the British arm of the South Korean electronics group. The new display also incorporates a scrolling
ticker of
Sky News headlines. Before LG,
Vodafone had a neon sign installed on that spot, which displayed both its logo and personal messages that could be submitted on a special website and displayed at a certain time and date. On special occasions the lights are switched off, such as the deaths of
Winston Churchill in 1965 and
Diana, Princess of Wales in 1997. On 21 June 2007, they were switched off for one hour as part of the Lights Out London campaign. After the
death of Elizabeth II, all advertising on Piccadilly Circus was replaced with an image honouring the Queen, as part of a suspension of
out-of-home advertising agreed upon by the industry. Other companies and brands that have had signs on the site were
Bovril,
Volkswagen,
Max Factor,
Wrigley's Spearmint,
Skol,
Air India and
Gold Flake (as Will's Gold Flake Cigarettes). Since 2020, the
Cultural Institute of Radical Contemporary Arts has broadcast specially commissioned two-minute artworks for the screens, broadcast at the same time each evening. In 2022 the segments were shown at 8:22 p.m.
Shaftesbury Memorial and the statue of Anteros At the south-eastern side of the Circus, moved after
World War II from its original position in the centre, stands the
Shaftesbury Memorial Fountain, erected in 1892–1893 to commemorate the philanthropic works of
Lord Shaftesbury, a Victorian politician,
philanthropist and social reformer. The subject of the Memorial is the Greek god
Anteros and was given the name
The Angel of Christian Charity but is generally mistaken for his brother
Eros.
Criterion Theatre '' The
Criterion Theatre, a Grade II*
listed building, stands on the south side of Piccadilly Circus. Apart from the box office area, the entire theatre, with nearly 600 seats, is underground and is reached by descending a tiled stairway.
Columns are used to support both the dress circle and the upper circle, restricting the views of some of the seats inside. The theatre was designed by
Thomas Verity and opened as a theatre on 21 March 1874, although original plans were for it to become a concert hall. Actor and theatre proprietor
Charles Wyndham became the manager of the Criterion in 1875, and under him it became one of the leading light comedy houses in London. In 1883, it was forced to close to improve ventilation and to replace gaslights with electric lights and was reopened the following year. The theatre closed in 1989 and was extensively renovated, reopening in October 1992. Recent productions at the Criterion include
The 39 Steps, a parody play adapted from the
1935 film by
Alfred Hitchcock, with the play running for nine years at the venue from 2006 to 2015.
London Pavilion cinema in 1964 showing ''
A Hard Day's Night'' On the north-eastern side of Piccadilly Circus, on the corner between Shaftesbury Avenue and Coventry Street, is the
London Pavilion. The first building bearing the name was built in 1859 and was a
music hall. In 1885, Shaftesbury Avenue was built through the former site of the Pavilion, and a new London Pavilion was constructed, which also served as a music hall. In 1923, electric billboards were erected on the side of the building. In 1934, the building underwent significant structural alteration and was converted into a
cinema. In 1986, the building was rebuilt, preserving the 1885 façade, and converted into a
shopping arcade. In 2000, the building was connected to the neighbouring
Trocadero Centre, and signage on the building was altered in 2003 to read "London Trocadero". The
basement of the building connects with the Underground station.
Major shops The former
Swan & Edgar department store on the west side of the circus between
Piccadilly and
Regent Street was built in 1928–29 to a design by
Reginald Blomfield. Since the closure of the department store in the early 1980s, the building has been successively the flagship London store of music chains
Tower Records,
Virgin Megastore and
Zavvi.
Lillywhites is a major retailer of
sporting goods located on the corner of the circus and Lower Regent Street, next to the Shaftesbury fountain. It moved to its present site in 1925. Lillywhites is popular with tourists, and they regularly offer sale items, including international football jerseys up to 90% off. Nearby
Fortnum & Mason is often considered to be part of the Piccadilly Circus shopping area and is known for its expansive food hall.
County Fire Office Dominating the north side of the circus, on the corner of Glasshouse Street, is the County Fire Office building, with a statue of
Britannia on the roof. The original building was designed by
John Nash as the extreme southern end of his Regent Street Quadrant. Its dramatic façade was clearly influenced by
Inigo Jones's old Somerset House. Although Robert Abraham was the County Fire Insurance Company's architect, it was probably Nash who was instrumental in choosing the design. In 1924 the old County Fire Office was demolished and replaced with a similar but much coarser building designed by
Reginald Blomfield, but retaining the statue of Britannia. During the
London Blitz it was the only building in the Circus to be damaged, with a few window panes blown out. The building is Grade II listed. ==The London Underground station==