All Hallows Place disappeared due to Second World World bombing.
All Hallows Church in Southwark was built by George Gilbert Scott Junior in 1879 - an excellent example of Victorian gothic architecture.
All Hallows Place, then ’Victoria Place’, seems to predate the church by some twenty years.
The church and the surrounding streets were almost entirely destroyed during the Blitz. Fragments of All Hallows Church remain, including two stone archways and a chapel, all incorporated into a rebuilding of the north aisle of the church in 1957. This was closed to be public in 1971 and during the 1980s and 1990s the church was used a recording studio, and was associated with some notable artists of the time. In 2001 the studios closed down and the building fell into gradual disrepair. Southwark Cathedral leased the units on a short-term basis to a housing co-operative who are used the former studios for temporary accommodation.
Some of the bombsite rubble was restored to create a walled garden with lawns, flower beds and shrubbery - the Copperfield Street Community Gardens.