What is the Bracken House?

Bracken House is a building at 1 Friday Street and 10 Cannon Street in the City of London, occupied by the Financial Times newspaper until the 1980s, and again beginning May 2019. After refurbishments by John Robertson Architects, the Financial Times moved back into Bracken House in spring 2019.

When was Bracken House built?

Bracken House was built on a bomb site near St Paul’s Cathedral in the 1958 by Albert Richardson as the offices for international economics newspaper the FT, which had its printing presses there.

Is Bracken the same as fern?

Bracken is the UK’s most common fern and grows in dense stands on heathland, moorland, hillsides and in woodland. It is a large fern that favours dry, acid soils and spreads by underground rhizomes. Unlike many ferns, bracken dies back in winter, leaving brown, withered fronds that pepper the landscape.

Where are the FT offices?

The Financial Times is headquartered in Bracken House at 1, Friday Street, near the city’s financial centre, where it maintains its publishing house, corporate centre, and main editorial office.

Why is the FT printed on pink paper?

On 2 January 1893 the FT began printing on light pink paper to distinguish it from the similarly named Financial News: at the time it was also cheaper to print on unbleached paper (several other more general newspapers, such as The Sporting Times, had the same policy), but nowadays it is more expensive as the paper has …

Where is Financial Times based?

London
Financial Times is an international business newspaper based in London. The FT was founded in 1888 and has been owned since 1957 by the British publishing conglomerate Pearson, which also owns a 50 percent stake in the British foreign-affairs magazine The Economist.

Does bracken grow under trees?

Where it is eliminated by cultivation, bracken tends to re-invade quickly when cultivation ceases. It will grow under permanent woodland cover, but its vigour is usually limited to a few individual fronds.

Who is the owner of the Financial Times?

Nikkei Inc.
Financial Times Group
Financial Times/Owner

Is Financial Times still pink?

The FT’s new pages were not as pink as they are now, but they grew pinker over the years. Pink paper was actually cheaper than the white one traditionally used for newspapers.

Why is the FT salmon?

In 1893, The Financial Times, a prominent London newspaper, decided to start printing its articles on light salmon-pink paper. The pink background was meant to distinguish the paper from the Financial and Mining News.

Who read financial times?

MGR reveals that the FT reaches, on average, over 26 million readers every month during a 12 month period. And as syndicated readership surveys show, those readers are senior business decision-makers, high net worth consumers and influential policymakers. This combined global audience number is assured annually by PwC.

Where is Bracken House in the City of London?

Bracken House is a building at 1 Friday Street and 10 Cannon Street in the City of London, occupied by the Financial Times newspaper until the 1980s, and again beginning May 2019.

When did the Financial Times build Bracken House?

A late example of modern classicism, it was constructed from 1955 to 1958 to a design by Sir Albert Richardson to serve as the headquarters and printing works of the Financial Times, on a cleared bomb site southeast of St Paul’s Cathedral.

When did Bracken House become a Grade 2 building?

It became a Grade II listed building in 1987 – the first building built after the Second World War in England to become listed – and was upgraded to Grade II* in 2013. New offices were required for the Financial Times after it merged with the Financial News in 1945.

Where is the astrological clock in Bracken House?

Above the entrance on Cannon Street is an astrological clock, designed by Frank Dobson and Philip Bentham and made by Thwaites & Reed. The clock features the face of Winston Churchill at the centre of a large gold sunburst, Churchill having been a great friend of Viscount Bracken during the war.