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English: The Habitat store in the King's Road was originally the Gaumont Palace, a huge cinema first opened on the 8th December 1934. It was built on the site of the studios and laboratory of the film pioneer William Friese-Greene. The cinema was designed by architects William Edward Trent and Ernest F.Tulley. William Edward Trent commissioned his younger brother, the sculptor Newbury Abbot Trent, to create three bas-reliefs on the building's facade. These are still there. One is a relief portrait of Friese-Greene and on either side are relief figures of Comedy and Tragedy.
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Author Weglinde Gordon Lawson

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14 April 2011

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current16:14, 15 April 2011Thumbnail for version as of 16:14, 15 April 2011369 × 336 (29 KB)Weglinde{{Information |Description ={{en|1=The Habitat store in the King's Road was originally the Gaumont Palace, a huge cinema first opened on the 8th December 1934. It was built on the site of the studios and laboratory of the film pioneer William Friese-Gr

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