Modern icons: Understanding London's architecture renaissance
Modern icons: Understanding London's architecture renaissance
There are old cities. There are new cities. London's strange and seemingly eternal attraction lies in its ability to be simultaneously both.
London
is a city with Roman foundations and a street plan that emerges as a
chaotic hybrid of arrow-straight Roman roads, winding medieval alleys,
and marketplaces; but also well-meaning, if often half-hearted, attempts
to make it grander, more beautiful -- or at least more rational. But it
resists all attempts to overlay it with a sense of logic, just as it
defies the efforts of successive generations to transform it, despoil
it, or iron out the creases.
Through
this chaos emerges one of the world's most persistently desirable,
expensive, successful, and unpredictable cityscapes, a place that is
constantly changing yet somehow always remains fundamentally London.
Each
century seems to bring its radical transformations, from the Great Fire
in the 17th to the elegant city squares of the 18th, the explosion of
the suburbs of the 19th and the scars of war and the neophilia of
modernism in the 20th. But the 21st century is arguably already bringing
about the most radical shifts in scale and skyline that the city has
seen since the medieval era.
While
the post-Great Fire skyline was defined by the spires of Sir
Christopher Wren's churches, culminating in the great dome of St Paul's
Cathedral, the new cityscape is marked by supertall towers articulating
the city's real estate status as the reserve currency of the global
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And,
as if to reimpose itself on a profile in which height in itself is no
longer enough to make a statement, London has supercharged its
architecture to make itself seen.
Cities
with porcupine skylines are almost a cliché; what actually makes a city
buzz happens in its streets and squares, its shops and bars, the
chandelier-crowned restaurants and the subterranean dive bars. And
that's been a different story, one expressed through a cocktail of the
salvaged and the shiny, the particular and the generic.
In
one interpretation, the city's streets are being homogenized, the plate
glass windows and the glazed facades reducing the interface between
public and private, interior and exterior to a banal membrane. But in a
parallel route, architects and clients are weaving their buildings back
into the historic fabric, the city streets becoming intriguing
palimpsests in which the high tech gleams next to artfully maintained
dilapidation.
Walls are being
stripped of centuries of plaster and wallpaper and taken back to the
bare bones of brick and steel; battered floors and ceilings are revealed
as precious surfaces divulge their history through their degradation.
Many
of the best new works in the city appear not as monuments or towers, as
museums, or malls, but as pieces of infill -- considered, modest,
occasional glimpses of a coherent, characterful architecture that has
somehow emerged from this polyphony of voices, styles, and forms.
Eric Parry Architects' faience facade at 50 New Bond Street and 6a Architects'
cast-iron shop front for Paul Smith's store in nearby Albemarle Street
seem to represent a new, but also rather traditional, idea of ornament
as inherent to structure, a willingness to merge experiment and art with
the historic texture and the subtle but intriguing decorative character
of the city.
Adjaye Associates'
Rivington Place, meanwhile, introduces what appears to be a memory of
soot-stained industrial architecture scaled at the level of the street,
while Herzog & de Meuron adopt the cheap, polycarbonate, and concrete language of industrial construction for their shimmering Laban Building.
The
complexity of London's streetscape, the incoherence -- perhaps even
absence -- of an overarching plan, the layering of historic strata, and
the way in which modern megastructures are allowed to burst through the
filigree lace of medieval scale and grain, mean that buildings are never
experienced in a straightforward way.
Instead they are glimpsed poking above streets or reflected through shop windows or rain puddles.
London
is not a city of monuments but a metropolis of glances and slightly
hidden surfaces. Once obscured by the fog, it now fades into the drizzle
or creates the backdrop for the ebbs and flows of the crowd absorbed
more in their phones than the streets they are walking through.
The
photographs here capture precisely—or perhaps impressionistically—that
realm of glimpses and impressions, unexpected details and sudden
surprises, a cityscape of infinite variety and constantly evolving
aesthetics, which, no matter how well we think we know it, folds,
collapses, and elides into new views and vistas even as we walk its
endlessly intriguing streets.
Modern icons: Understanding London's architecture renaissance
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