Multi-storey block details: BS: one 10-storey block containing 80 dwellings; AS: two 10-storey blocks containing 120 dwellings; MS: one 11-storey block containing 40 dwellings; ET: two 10-storey blocks containing 160 dwellings; GS: three 14-storey blocks containing 189 dwellings; RV: two 16-storey blocks containing 120 dwellings; DP: one 15-storey block containing 58 dwellings; GL: one 15-storey block containing 58 dwellings; KR: one 15-storey block containing 58 dwellings; ES: three 15-storey blocks containing 174 dwellings; CS: one 10-storey block containing 102 dwellings; one 7-storey block containing 63 dwellings; Multi-storey block name(s): BS: Cresswell Mount; AS: The Braddocks II; The Braddocks I; MS: MS: Medea Tower; ET: Netherfield Brow II; Netherfield Brow I; GS: Mazzini House; Garibaldi House; Cavour House; RV: Millburn Heights; Brynford Heights; DP: Rock View; GL: Mere Bank; KR: Marwood Tower; ES: Seacombe Tower; Ellison Tower; Edinburgh Tower; CS: Unknown; Unknown; Image detail: General view of Everton Heights Redevelopment Area Original Commissioning Authority: Liverpool County Borough Council; Image taken: 1987;Context: Tower Block UK is a project supported by the Heritage Lottery Fund, bringing together public engagement and an openly-licensed image archive in an attempt to emphasise the social and architectural importance of tower blocks, and to frame multi-storey social housing as a coherent and accessible nationwide heritage. The Tower Block UK image archive is a searchable database of around 4,000 images of every multi-storey social housing development built in the UK. The photographs were largely taken in the 1980s by Miles Glendinning and are made available here for public use. As many of the blocks documented and photographed have since been demolished, the archive functions in part as a repository of information on an important aspect of UK heritage that is now vanishing. The archive itself catalogues multi-storey blocks as part of the developments within which they were initially commissioned and built. It gives details of notable dates, such as when local authorities approved the developments and when construction began or finished. Alongside this, the archive provides information on the local authorities, architects, and other agents involved in the processes of commissioning, designing, and constructing mass social housing. While the most historically 'accurate' identification labels in the database are the original overall d...