Effra Quay is a modern riverside public space on London’s Albert Embankment, part of the Tideway super sewer project completed in 2025. It takes its name from the River Effra – a "lost" Thames tributary that once flowed from Crystal Palace through Brixton and now empties into the Thames near Vauxhall Bridge, just metres from the quay. The space features artworks, seating, and ecological terraces, with design nods to the river’s history, including poems on ventilation columns that reference the hidden waterway.
The MI6 Building (officially the SIS Building) at Vauxhall Cross has been the headquarters of Britain’s foreign intelligence service since 1994. Its history is tied to the same riverside location:
• The site was once home to 19th-century Vauxhall Pleasure Gardens, later replaced by industrial buildings like a glass factory and gin distillery.
• Construction began in 1989, with archaeological digs uncovering 17th-century glass kilns and evidence of a river wall – likely linked to the Effra’s historic course.
• The building replaced the insecure Century House headquarters; its postmodern design was influenced by industrial architecture and ancient ziggurats, and it gained global fame through James Bond films.
The Connection: Both sit on land shaped by the River Effra. The MI6 building stands close to where the Effra now discharges into the Thames via a combined sewer overflow, while Effra Quay explicitly commemorates the river’s legacy – bridging London’s hidden natural history and its modern role as a hub of intelligence and urban renewal.
Would you like to visit either location and learn about nearby attractions along the Thames?