Canary Wharf, Tower Hamlets, Sky Scrapers.

According to the London Tall Buildings Survey, the highest concentration will be in the borough of Tower Hamlets, in East London. The area includes Mile End, Bethnal Green and Whitechapel and used to be an area which housed the working classes of the East End.

But the rapidly developing districts will soon be home to 18 newly built skyscrapers.

The south London borough of Lambeth has the second highest concentration of skyscrapers set to be built - with 11 expected this year.

TOWER HAMLETS DEVELOPED

New high rises will be erected in Lambeth's Nine Elms Point, Embassy Gardens in Wandsworth and the Chelsea Waterfront.

Buildings already underway and set to be completed this year are the Can of Ham at St Mary Axe in the financial district and 22 Bishopsgate.

The boroughs of Camden, Barnet and Hounslow are currently building their first skyscrapers.

One of the buildings set to alter the London skyline is Newfoundland, or the Diamond Tower, a 220-metre tall residential building in the Isle of Dogs, Tower Hamlets.

NEW LONDON SKYLINE

Last year the number of skyscrapers in the capital hit 541, according to New London Architecture and GL Hearn’s sixth annual London Tall Buildings Survey.

The survey shows there are 121 buildings currently under construction, the a record high ahead of 2017's 115.

Significant tall buildings in the pipeline after 2019 include the Spire, nicknamed the Flower Tower, set to stand 775ft tall in Canary Wharf by 2020.

Alexander McQueen's luxury London home for sale for £8.5m:multi-million pound refurbishment celebrates the life and work of the iconic fashion designer

Alexander McQueen's former Mayfair residence has been refurbished into a duplex penthouse, for sale for £8.5 million.

The world-renowned British fashion designer bought much of 17 Dunraven Street in 2009 for a reported £2.5 million.

He was in the process of turning the townhouse, that had been converted into flats, back into a single residence when he took his own life in 2010.

Over the past 16 months the upper floors have been transformed into a two-bedroom, two-bathroom luxury apartment spanning 1,790sq ft.

The multi-million pound refurbishment by Paul Davies London celebrates the life and work of the fashion designer.