Rolls Chapel

Now the Maughan Library (/mɒn/) is the main research library of King's College London, forming part of the Strand Campus, formerly part of the Public Record Office.

From the Wikipedia page.

The Maughan occupies the site of the Domus Conversorum (House of the Converts or Le Converse Inn in Norman French), later known as the "Chapel of the Master of the Rolls". The House of the Converts was established by Henry III in 1232 to provide a residence and chapel for Jews who had converted to Christianity, and the chapel attached to it began the following year. Following the expulsion of Jews from England by Edward I through the Edict of Expulsion in 1290, the office of the Master of the Rolls became warden and the chapel became known as the Chapel of the Master of the Rolls, or Rolls Chapel. In 1377, Edward III assigned the House of the Converts to be used to store the rolls and records of the Court of Chancery.

The chapel was rebuilt in 1617 by Inigo Jones, again in 1734 and altered in 1784. The records were moved in 1856 and the chapel was demolished in 1895. The only remains of the chapel is an arch mounted on the garden elevation of the Chancery lane wing, three funerary monuments, stained glass panels and a mosaic floor.