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New U.S. Embassy criticized by Trump opens in London

Armed British police officers patrol around the new United States Embassy building in London, Tuesday, Jan. 16, 2018. The new U.S. Embassy in London, denigrated last week by President Donald Trump as too expensive and in a poor location, is set to open to the public. The embassy, in the formerly industrial Nine Elms neighborhood, will open for public business Tuesday. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham) LMD109
Armed British police officers patrol around the new United States Embassy building in London, Tuesday, Jan. 16, 2018. The new U.S. Embassy in London, denigrated last week by President Donald Trump as too expensive and in a poor location, is set to open to the public. The embassy, in the formerly industrial Nine Elms neighborhood, will open for public business Tuesday. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham) LMD109
Published Jan. 16, 2018

LONDON — The new U.S. Embassy in London, criticized last week by President Donald Trump as too expensive and poorly located, opened its doors to the public Tuesday for the first time.

The gleaming embassy, in the formerly industrial Nine Elms neighborhood in south London, replaces the embassy in Grosvenor Square that had for decades been associated with the U.S. presence in the United Kingdom. That building has been sold to a Qatari government investment fund planning to turn it into a luxury hotel.

U.S. officials say it would have cost hundreds of millions of dollars to upgrade security at the older building and bring it up to modern safety standards.

Trump tweeted last week that he travel not come to London to open the new embassy because it represented a poor investment.

The president's tweet read: "Reason I canceled my trip to London is that I am not a big fan of the Obama Administration having sold perhaps the best located and finest embassy in London for 'peanuts,' only to build a new one in an off location for 1.2 billion dollars. Bad deal. Wanted me to cut ribbon-NO!"

There were no ceremonies to mark the public opening of the facility, and some landscaping features were still being put in place. A line of evergreen trees was being planted at the edge of the site, and a relatively small number of people showed up on official business.

The formerly run-down neighborhood is littered with cranes as a number of major towers are shooting up in the blocks surrounding the embassy, which is helping the area's rejuvenation.

Visa processing was starting in a "soft" rollout of the new facility. Officials said 50 applicants were processed Tuesday.

The embassy initially planned to process 200 people per day for the rest of the week, but doubled that figure to 400 late Tuesday afternoon because the procedures had worked well during the day.

Though Trump blamed predecessor Barack Obama for the expensive new embassy in his angry tweet, the project was in fact announced in October 2008 during the presidency of George W. Bush.

Trump's plans to visit Britain have met resistance from some politicians and activists who disagree with his policies on a number of fronts. Substantial protests were expected.