(CC BY-SA - credit: Images George Rex)
Thursday, 31 December 2020
Lion & Lamb Yard / Farnham
Lyons+Sleeman+Hoare Architects. 120,000 sq ft retail development based on a courtyard of a C16 coaching inn. Farnham Conservation Area, Borough of Waverley, Surrey, UK.
Wednesday, 30 December 2020
UCA / Farnham
Farnham campus of the University for the Creative Arts. Seen here, the Craft Study Centre, architects A&Q Partnership, c.2005. Falkner Road, Borough of Waverley, Surrey, UK.
(CC BY-SA - credit: Images George Rex)
Tuesday, 29 December 2020
Nelson Arms / Farnham
Grade II listed public house at corner of Castle Street and Park Row. Listed as C18 although some of the earliest structure is said to be vestiges of three C14 farm cottages. Farnham Conservation Area, Borough of Waverley, Surrey, UK.
(CC BY-SA - credit: Images George Rex)
Monday, 28 December 2020
45 Castle St / Farnham
Early C18 front to a timber-framed core. Grade II* listed. Farnham Conservation Area, Borough of Waverley, Surrey, UK.
(CC BY-SA - credit: Images George Rex)
Tuesday, 22 December 2020
Happy Holidays / 2020
Recycling past Xmas pics due to Covid! From top-left, clockwise...
(CC BY-SA - credit: Images George Rex)
Monday, 21 December 2020
Sunday, 20 December 2020
Millennium Memorial / High Path Estate
Horse-trough style memorial installed January 2000 by High Path Estate Residents Association. One of two facing Merton High Street. London Borough of Merton.
(CC BY-SA - credit: Images George Rex)
Saturday, 19 December 2020
The Trafalgar SW19 / II
Earliest reference is 1868 and said to be the smallest pub in Merton. A single-storey extension was added in 1906. Notwithstanding its modest exterior it has won several CAMRA awards. 23 High Path, London Borough of Merton.
(CC BY-SA - credit: Images George Rex)
Friday, 18 December 2020
Harris Academy / SW19
CPMG Architects, 2020. Academy schools are outside local authority democratic control. Criticisms have included that they are...
"a waste of money, selective, damaging to the schools and communities around them, forced on parents who do not want them, and a move towards privatisation of education by the back door" [source Wikipedia 17/12/2020].
This one looks like a factory, which I suppose it is in a sense. High Path, London Borough of Merton.
Thursday, 17 December 2020
Brighton / Western Bandstand x2
[from the archives of 2012]
Designed by Phillip Lockwood, Brighton Borough Surveyor, completed 1884. Renovation in 2009 managed by ABIR architects. Originally made of cast iron with copper-clad timber roof. Sometimes known as "The Birdcage", it weighs 23 tonnes. Grade II listed. King's Road, Brighton & Hove City.Both pics ©2012 All Rights Reserved
Great Arthur House / Roof wing detail
[from the archives of 2012]
Architects: Chamberlin, Powell, and Bon, completed 1959 at the Golden Lane Estate. Showing one of the concrete roof-wings that conceal the services (lift-room, water tanks, etc) from ground view. The use of yellow glass panels preceded the move to Brutalist functionalism. 17 floors, 120 units, Grade II listed. City of London.©2012 All Rights Reserved
Wednesday, 16 December 2020
Tuesday, 15 December 2020
Golden Lane Leisure Centre / x2
[from the archives of 2012]
Originally designed by Chamberlin, Powell, and Bon, completed in 1963. Renovated to designs by Cartwright Pickard Architects, 2012. Includes a pool, gym and sports hall. Grade II listed. City of London.
Both pics ©2012 All Rights Reserved
Monday, 14 December 2020
Children's Eye Centre / x2
[from the archives of 2012]
Architects: Penoyre & Prasad, 2007. Moorfields Eye Hospital is a world-class centre, but the Victorian edifice can be a bit foreboding for youngsters. This happy building around the back of the main hospital is for the 0-16 year-olds, and has an interior to match — also direct connection to the main hospital's operating theatres without it being obvious that you have left the children's building :) Peerless Street, London Borough of Islington.Both pics ©2012 All Rights Reserved
Sunday, 13 December 2020
Hammersmith Bridge / south
[from the archives of 2012]
Ornate suspension bridge designed and engineered by Sir Joseph Bazalgette, 1887. Utilizing stone piers of an earlier bridge and built of cast and wrought iron. The wrought iron is used in tension and cast iron for compression and casting. Grade II* listed. Taken from south bank in London Borough of Richmond upon Thames.(CC BY-SA credit: Images George Rex)
Saturday, 12 December 2020
Turnpike Lane Underground Station / North entrance
[from the archives of 2012]
Architect: Charles Holden, 1932. In the modern style and Grade II listed. Even the outpouring of the hot-dog shop can't compromise its charm. London Borough of Haringey. ©2012 All Rights Reserved
Friday, 11 December 2020
Tottenham Hale / Waiting Room
[from the archives of 2012]
Architects: Will Alsop, John Lyall & Jan Störmer, 1991. Station waiting-room looking like a slightly up-market Nissen hut, but curiously eye-catching! Steel and aluminium, frieze behind by Bruce McLean. London Borough of Haringey.©2012 All Rights Reserved
Thursday, 10 December 2020
Moorgreen House / exterior detail
[from the archives of 2012]
Part of the 1970s Earlstoke Estate. Renton Howard Wood Levin for the GLC. Low-rise apartments and maisonettes of concrete and brick construction, in a Brutalist style albeit with brick finish. Wynyatt Street, London Borough of Islington.©2012 All Rights Reserved
Wednesday, 9 December 2020
Nonsuch Mansion / IV
Architect: Sir Jeffry Wyattville, 1806, in a Tudor Gothic Revival style, evoking Henry VIII's palace that was once in Nonsuch Park. Brick with 'Roman' cement render. Grade II* listed. Cheam, Epsom & Ewell Borough, Surrey, UK.
(CC BY-SA - credit: Images George Rex)
Tuesday, 8 December 2020
32 & 34 High St / Ewell
"Originally The White House, a gentleman’s residence, long the home of the Andrew family. Built in the late 18thC" (source: Epsom & Ewell Business Explorer). Timber frame with C19 brick front and shop units added c.1904. Mansard roof with dormers. Grade II listed. No. 32 is vacant and rather neglected. Borough of Epsom & Ewell, Surrey, UK.
Monday, 7 December 2020
28 & 30 High St / Ewell
On the site of The White Horse pub in pre-1819 era (source: Epsom & Ewell Business Explorer). Brick-built C19 with 2 shops, replacement sash windows above. Pediment inset with half-round attic window. Borough of Epsom & Ewell, Surrey, UK.
Sunday, 6 December 2020
St Mary Ewell / II
Rebuild architect: Henry Clutton, 1848, in a Gothic Revival style using coursed Swanage limestone rubble. Castellated tower with corner pinnacles. Grade II listed. Church of St Mary the Virgin, Borough of Epsom & Ewell, Surrey, UK.
(CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
Saturday, 5 December 2020
Mill Lane / Cottages
Grade II listing says: "Late C18 early C19. Two storeys, painted weatherboarding, Yorkshire casements to 1st floor, sashes to ground floor. Plank doors with simple hoods, old pantiles." No.7 on corner ("Crooked Cottage") has casement windows to ground floor also. Ewell, Borough of Epsom & Ewell, Surrey, UK.
Friday, 4 December 2020
Upper Mill / Ewell
Rebuilt c.1810 on a watermill site first recorded in the Domesday Book (1086). The Upper Mill was used for flour production until 1954 although by then water power had been replaced by gas. Renovated in the 1980s during a conversion to offices. Ewell, Borough of Epsom & Ewell, Surrey, UK.
Thursday, 3 December 2020
Bourne Hall / Park
Gardens of Bourne Hall, Ewell, Borough of Epsom & Ewell, Surrey, UK.
(CC BY-SA - credit: Images George Rex)
Wednesday, 2 December 2020
Beaux / Rossa
C19 brick-built dwelling, now with two shops. Divided in the late C19 according to Surrey Archaeological Society, which also reported a fragment of Roman pottery found on-site. 38 High Street, Ewell, Borough of Epsom & Ewell, Surrey, UK.
Tuesday, 1 December 2020
High Finance / DLR
[from the archives of 2012]
World HQ's of Barclays and HSBC banks by architects HOK (2005) and Foster + Partners (2002) respectively. DLR doesn't stand for Dishonest Libor Rigging, but for Docklands Light Railway: a rail transport system serving London's Docklands district. Poplar, London Borough of Tower Hamlets.©2012 All Rights Reserved
Monday, 30 November 2020
Sign / Keep off the groynes
[from the archives of 2012]
Beach nr. Kingsway, Brighton & Hove City.
(CC BY-SA credit: Images George Rex)
Sunday, 29 November 2020
Orbit Tower / base
[from the archives of 2012]
Tower sculptor: Anish Kapoor, Structural Designer: Cecil Balmond, Architecture: Ushida Findlay Architects (UFA), Design and Engineering: Arup.
Olympic Park, Stratford, London Borough of Newham.©2012 All Rights Reserved
Saturday, 28 November 2020
Lockdown Diptych / XIII
- Left: Monastiraki Sq / tiles, Athens, Greece.
- Right: Tiles / Werter Rd, Putney, London Borough of Wandsworth.
Friday, 27 November 2020
GMV / lake reflections
[from the archives of 2012]
Erskine Tovatt Architects, master-planning; EPR Architects, production, c.2003. The lake is part of an ecology park, which also has areas of shingle beach, marsh, meadow and wet woodland. Greenwich Millennium Village, London Borough of Greenwich.©2012 All Rights Reserved
Thursday, 26 November 2020
Canary Wharf / DLR Station
[from the archives of 2012]
Architects: GEC-Mowlem 1991. Six platforms serving three DLR tracks. Soaring elliptical roof of steel and glass. Seen from south in this image. London Borough of Tower Hamlets.©2012 All Rights Reserved
Wednesday, 25 November 2020
Weston Master / V
Photo of my Weston Master V under a scan from page 4 of its instruction book. Light meter made in 1970s by Sangamo Weston Ltd., Enfield, UK.
(CC BY-SA - credit: Images George Rex)
Bream Street / E3
[from the archives of 2012]
Fish Island has some appropriately named streets including the above. The red loop bridge is at the end of Roach Road, and Bridget Riley's studios are in Dace Road. Fish Island, London Borough of Tower Hamlets.(CC BY-SA credit: Images George Rex)
Tuesday, 24 November 2020
Roach Point Bridge / Omega Works
[from the archives of 2012]
©2012 All Rights Reserved
Monday, 23 November 2020
Lockdown Diptych / XII
- Left: Fountain / Wimbledon Parkside. London Borough of Merton.
- Right: Choragic Monument / Lysicrates. Athens, Attica, Greece.
Parkesine / mural
[from the archives of 2012]
The first man-made plastic was manufactured in Hackney Wick, 1866. London Borough of Tower Hamlets.
Mural by Bread Collective, July 2012.
(CC BY-SA credit: Images George Rex)
Sunday, 22 November 2020
Wall with lichen / Rookhope
[from the archives of 2012]
Stone wall near Rookhope Burn, Rookhope, Co. Durham.
©2012 All Rights Reserved
Saturday, 21 November 2020
My AF-S Nikkor / 24-120mm
AF-S NIKKOR 24-120mm f/4G ED VR. 5x zoom lens designed for use with Nikon FX-format SLRs.
(CC BY-SA - credit: Images George Rex.)
Friday, 20 November 2020
Byker Wall / Newcastle
[from the archives of 2012]
Architect: Ralph Erskine (1914-2005). A 1970s housing estate in the functionalist romantic style, grade II* listed and regarded by many, including UNESCO, as a pioneering social housing development — though derided by others. The "wall" acts as a rampart to shelter the inner development from a busy road and a cold wind. Newcastle upon Tyne, England.(CC BY-SA credit: Images George Rex)
Thursday, 19 November 2020
BBC TV Centre / Antennas
[from the archives of 2012]
British Broadcasting Corporation Television Centre, Wood Lane/White City. London Borough of Hammersmith & Fulham. (CC BY-SA credit: Images George Rex)
Wednesday, 18 November 2020
Barrier Park / Memorial Canopy
[from the archives of 2012]
Architects: Patel Taylor in collaboration with Groupe Signes (Landscape). Engineers: Arup. Opened in 2000, the Memorial Canopy faces the Thames Barrier and commemorates Newham residents lost in the two World Wars. The wall is made of fair-faced concrete.The park contains 22 acres of lawns, some beautiful trees and hedges, fountains, gardens, wildflower meadows, a children's play area and a 5-a-side football/basketball court. It has received many awards including an RIBA 2001 Award. London Borough of Newham.
©2012 All Rights Reserved
Olympics / Shooting Range
[from the archives of 2012]
Magma Architecture 2012. One of three transportable buildings on Woolwich Common accommodating shooting ranges for the 2012 Olympics. White PVC membrane over a steel supporting framework. I believe that the structures are going to be reused elsewhere after the Games and the common land will have some new trees planted to replace those that had to be removed. London Borough of Greenwich.©2012 All Rights Reserved
Olympics / Shooting Range #3
©2012 All Rights Reserved
Tuesday, 17 November 2020
Thames Cable Car / June 2012 #6
[from the archives of 2012]
WilkinsonEyre Architects 2012, opened June 28. Showing the north station, named Emirates Royal Docks, at Western Gateway. It's about a 600m walk from here to the west entrance of the ExCeL centre. London Borough of Newham. ©2012 All Rights Reserved
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