Britain | Bagehot

King’s Cross, a miracle in London

If Britain has a future, it’s there

A model map of King's Cross area in London with the train station, the tube sign, the Coal Drops Yard building and the Granary building.
Illustration: Nate Kitch

To gauge whether Britain is going to make it, go to the central London district of King’s Cross. Exit the station to the west and then head north to Regent’s Canal. Stride past the solitary but well-used children’s swing inside the technicolour birdcage. To your right is Google’s sidescraper—a flat, 300-metre-long slug of wood, concrete and glass, which is due to open next year. To your left is the new headquarters of AstraZeneca, a pharma giant, which moved here in 2022. Cut through a snicket and past Universal Music Group, which in 2018 ditched plush Kensington for an area that has gone from industrial wasteland to the best hope for the British economy in barely a decade.

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This article appeared in the Britain section of the print edition under the headline “The miracle of King’s Cross”

From the October 26th 2024 edition

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