The street is one of the oldest in Bristol and dates back to the 17th century.
It’s home to the Old Vic Theatre, the oldest the oldest continually operating theatre in the English-speaking world.
The theatre received a £25 million redevelopment project from 2016 to 2018.
The pubs on the street were also affected during the Covid pandemic.
Scroll through to see how King Street and the Bristol Old Vic Theatre have changed.

1. King Street- 1832
Number 8 King Street, Bristol, UK. Dating from 1665, Grade II* listed. The image is taken from a printed broadside entitled 'The Bribery Box', published in 1832 and now in the collections of the Bristol Central Library. | Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

2. King Street - 1941
The Llandoger Trow public house, King Street, Bristol, 1941. A sign over the door to the public house dates the building to 1664. It was originally a row of five houses. Two of the houses were destroyed by bombing during World War II, the effects of which can be seen to the extreme left of this photograph. | English Heritage/Heritage Images/Getty Images

3. Bristol Old Vic Theatre - 1943
A 1943 interior shot of the theatre | Matt Cardy/Getty Images

4. Bristol Old Vic Theatre - 1943
A 1943 exterior shot of the theatre | Matt Cardy/Getty Images