Newington Causeway

Newington Causeway is a road in Southwark, London, between the Elephant and Castle and Borough High Street.

[1] In 1912, an outpatients' department of the South London Hospital for Women and Children was opened in Newington Causeway, using money raised by Harriet Shaw Weaver, publisher of The Freewoman, and other feminists.

[2] Metro Central Heights (originally known as Alexander Fleming House) -- an early 1960s series of multi-storey blocks designed by Ernő Goldfinger as office buildings subsequently converted into flats—stands at the southern end of the road.

The Ministry of Sound, a famous nightclub, is in Gaunt Street just off Newington Causeway.

[3] The Salvation Army UK and Republic of Ireland headquarters occupy a large building at 101 Newington Causeway.

View of Metro Central Heights , designed by Ernő Goldfinger , at the southern end of Newington Causeway
Entrance to the Elephant & Castle Underground station at the junction of Newington Causeway with the Elephant and Castle roundabout