The area west of Caledonian Road was further affected by the sale c . 1852 of Copenhagen House and 72 a. to the Corporation of London, which demolished the house and built the Metropolitan Cattle Market on 30 a., opened in 1855. ( fn. 3 ) Drovers' lodgings, five public houses, and two hotels were put up around the market, and the Corporation built a block of working-class dwellings c . 1865. ( fn. 4 ) In the 1850s building began on Cubitt's land, but the railway, prison, and market made poor neighbours and houses had to be designed for artisans and clerks rather than the wealthier residents catered for south of Offord Road. The 1 a. on the west side of Caledonian Road was leased in 1853 to Henry Law, who built the 14 houses in Arthur Terrace fronting Caledonian Road (nos. 353-79 odd), with a workshop added to the first house and a stable yard at the back. ( fn. 5 ) Law continued Arthur Terrace on the opposite side of Caledonian Road with seven houses (? nos. 418-406 even) in th...