Has any damaged/destroyed part of London not been rebuilt since the Blitz?

Yes, any construction project in a city centre location will routinely screen for unexploded ordnance as part of the design process.
Bombs are still being found semi-regularly around the South West UK (I don’t know about other parts).
A German WWII bomb was found under the floorboards of the main hall of my primary school during renovation work when I was there (30 years ago). Only a few weeks ago a trawler dragged one up off the sea bed in Torbay.
The Royal Navy are responsible for disposing of them.

[QUOTE=amanset]
And why Coventry is a mess of concrete, it was largely rebuilt cheaply in the 50s and 60s.
[/QUOTE]

The same is true for Plymouth, which was almost completely obliterated in 1941, then rebuilt in the 50s. Exeter suffered similarly, but was, for the most part, more sympathetically reconstructed. A lot of the 1950s era concrete eyesores in both cities have only just been replaced with 2010s era steel and glass eyesores though.

That photo has so much sun-and-shadow contrast it’s hard to see anything.

It’s my understanding that East Germany had whole blocks of destruction until the time the wall fell or after… but enclosed in false building facades, so it couldn’t be seen.

I thought something terrible had happened to the Albert Memorial as well, but apparently it’s supposed to look like that.

Well, here’s one I took last fall.

There was the case of a bomb site in Soho, just a few minutes’ walk from Piccadilly Circus, which remained undeveloped until 2009 and where the redevelopment was only completed last year.

And a German investment firm was involved! Mmmm. That’s good irony.

Or reparations?
:wink:

Here it is on Streetview:

I was in Berlin weeks after the wall fell. There were quite a few abandoned buildings with battle damage in or near no mans land. I probably have some pictures somewhere. In 2001 when I went back the same area was filled with Bugatti dealers, high end jewelry stores and other places I didn’t make enough money to even look inside.

Bugatti did not have a dealer network in 2001.

East Germany had a thriving black market. :wink:

An unexploded bomb was discovered yesterday near Wembley Stadium, and is currently being defused.
Thankfully it seems to have disrupted rehearsals for Britain’s Got Talent.

Their is a church left in West Berlin as a kind of memorial. I think that there is another less iconic one in East Berlin, but I don’t find a picture of it.