The Twentieth Century Society

Campaigning for outstanding buildings

Risk List

Reuse Them or Lose Them: the Risk List 2025 highlights outstanding 20th and 21st century buildings across the country that are at risk from demolition, dereliction or neglect.

This year the list is dominated by cases from the north of England, with 6 of the 10 buildings featured being from Yorkshire, Lancashire, Tyneside, Merseyside, and Greater Manchester, and only one case from London. From a Bauhaus-inspired 1930s department store in Bradford (2025 City of Culture), to a 1970s brutalist concrete football stand in Newcastle, and a 1980s ‘High-Tech Nissen hut’ in Newham; the list demonstrates the extraordinary breadth of architectural styles that characterises the modern period (1914 – the present day).

For the first time, the Risk List also includes three Millennium-era buildings: The former National Centre for Popular Music in Sheffield (1999), National Wildflower Centre in Knowsley (2000), and Archaeolink Prehistory Park in Aberdeenshire (1997). Some 25 years after the turn of the new Millennium and 30 years since the creation of the National Lottery, which provided the funding for so many of these architecturally ambitious projects, their physical legacy is now increasingly vulnerable and bold new uses are required to ensure their continued survival.

Download here:

  • The Risk List publication – 2025 Issue

    Download

  • The Risk List publication – 2023 Issue

    Download

Reuse Them or Lose Them

The launch of The Risk List was trailed by a nationwide billboard campaign over the past week, believed to be the first of its kind for architectural heritage. The ‘Reuse Them or Lose Them’ slogan appeared on billboards across Sheffield, Brighton, Bristol, Southwark, Islington, and Hackney.

The Risk List also encourages members of the public to get involved, with specific actions to help save each building – from writing to an MP or the Secretary of State, to joining grassroots campaigns fighting for buildings at a local level. In marginal cases, individual initiative and collective action really can make the difference.

View updates on all previous lists below and download our full Risk List publication to get involved!

2023 Risk List

2021 Risk List

2019 Risk List

2017 Risk List

2015 Risk List

Risk List

Browse the pins on this map to see all the buildings at risk.

Show map