Bath time: returning to the city that helped launch his career in the mid-1970s, Nicholas Grimshaw re-contextualizes his machine aesthetic in the heart of Georgian Bath.To the pump-room we went, where the grave and the gay And the aged, and the sickly, lounge time away; Where all the choice spirits are seen making free With the sov'reign cordial, the true 'eau de vie'.--The English Spy, 1825 A spa is a machine for bathing in. And this is not solely a modernist's view. Even in ancient times, spas were highly technical buildings with practical and ritual traditions. With water at the heart of their culture, the Romans led the way, either by going to where the water was, or by building spectacular devices to divert it. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] In cities such as Bath, Roman engineering remains an inspiration. As part of this legacy of technical innovation, which began in Bath in AD43, an appropriately visionary decision was made in 1997 to appoint a contemporary architect to design a new city spa--and Nicholas Grimshaw Sir Nicholas Grimshaw, CBE (born 9 October, 1939) is a prominent English architect, particularly noted for several modernist buildings, including the international railway terminal at London's Waterloo Station and the Eden Project in Cornwall. was chosen. For over 35 years, Grimshaw's practice has pursued functionalist func·tion·al·ism n. 1. The doctrine that the function of an object should determine its design and materials. 2. A doctrine stressing purpose, practicality, and utility. 3. and expressionist ex·pres·sion·ism n. A movement in the arts during the early part of the 20th century that emphasized subjective expression of the artist's inner experiences. ex·pres ideals, most recently demonstrated at Eden (AR August 2001). But, with this reputation and the potential for Grimshaw to design a new attraction with the draw of the city's iconic i·con·ic adj. 1. Of, relating to, or having the character of an icon. 2. Having a conventional formulaic style. Used of certain memorial statues and busts. square, circus, and crescent, many questioned the propriety pro·pri·e·ty n. pl. pro·pri·e·ties 1. The quality of being proper; appropriateness. 2. Conformity to prevailing customs and usages. 3. proprieties The usages and customs of polite society. of procuring a Grimshaw building for Bath. Living there at the time, in the heart of a precious World Heritage City, I recall a common question on people's lips was, 'Grimshaw? City fringe machine, perhaps. But can he do context?' This was new territory for Grimshaw, and the stakes were high. The previously derelict derelict n. something or someone who is abandoned, such as a ship left to drift at sea or a homeless person ignored by family and society. (See: abandon, dereliction) DERELICT, common law. spa, which lay dormant for over 25 years, comprised four listed buildings listed building Noun (in Britain, Australia, and New Zealand) a building protected from demolition or alteration because of its special historical or architectural interest listed building n (ARCHIT , all of which needed full restoration. So, in collaboration with conservation experts from Donald Insall Associates (1), new functions were carefully inserted. These included reception, catering, and administrative spaces within Thomas Baldwin's 7/7A and 8 Bath Street; a wet treatment suite in Wood the Younger's 1775 Hot Bath; and the full restoration of Baldwin's 1790 Cross Bath--arguably the most sacred of the city's ancient monuments ancient monument ancient n → historisches Denkmal nt . Then, on the site of the former 1927 Beau Street Pool, Grimshaw designed a new five-storey leisure complex which, as the fulcrum fulcrum: see lever. between the existing buildings, would resolve the conflicting floor levels and rationalize ra·tion·al·ize v. 1. To make rational. 2. To devise self-satisfying but false or inconsistent reasons for one's behavior, especially as an unconscious defense mechanism through which irrational acts or feelings are made to appear circulation to provide a fully accessible public building. Grimshaw's formal response was simple. On axis with, and in response to the formal geometry of the Hot Bath, a three-storey stone cube has been raised above the basement plant room and lower ground floor pool on huge concrete mushroom columns. Then, in a manner reminiscent of Foster's Willis Faber Dumas Building (AR September 1975), residual space between cube and plot boundary has been enclosed by a smooth glass curtain-wall, making space for a cylindrical cyl·in·dri·cal adj. Of, relating to, or having the shape of a cylinder, especially of a circular cylinder. stair tower at the corner of the site, and producing delightful daytime reflections of the neighbouring Georgian streetscapes. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] In a city where the use of stone is a prerequisite for any new building, to convince the planners of his ambitions to use glass, Grimshaw did not have to look far to find his precedent. By simply pointing to the south transept transept (trăn`sĕpt'), term applied to the transverse portion of a building cutting its main axis at right angles or to each arm of such a portion. of the city's famous Abbey, which was clearly visible from the planning office's meeting room, he identified the city's first glazed glaze n. 1. A thin smooth shiny coating. 2. A thin glassy coating of ice. 3. a. A coating of colored, opaque, or transparent material applied to ceramics before firing. b. building with its prototypical curtain-wall. Like Grimshaw's industrial buildings, the spa has a strict operational brief--to process bathers with leisurely efficiency. On entering the building, each visitor is issued with an electronic wristband wristband An identifying bracelet attached to a Pt's wrist at the time of admission to a health care facility, which may be the only identifier used during a person's stay in a hospital that operates lockers, records facilities used and even monitors how many Bath buns The Bath bun is a rich, sweet yeast dough shaped round that has a lump of sugar baked in the bottom and more crushed sugar sprinkled on top after baking. Variations in ingredients include candied fruit peel, currants or larger raisins or sultanas. you consume in the first-floor cafe. Visitors then pass immediately through a suite of glazed changing cubicles cubicles individual cow bed spaces separated by half height and half length partitions. Usually located in loose housing cow accommodation in which the cow is free to wander at will. that act as wet/dry transition locks, transforming them from dressed citizen to undressed bathers. From here you can either descend into the sinuous sinuous /sin·u·ous/ (sin´u-us) bending in and out; winding. sinuous bending in and out; winding. subterranean pool and wet treatment suite, or rise sequentially through the building to dry treatment rooms, steam rooms, and spectacular rooftop pool. The naturally hot spring water that fills the pools, and also pre-heats supplementary hot water requirements within the building, is a blend taken from three springs--the Hetling Spring, Cross Bath Spring and Kings Spring. Bore holes take water from the base of each source, the water is then processed in the basement plant room, a dramatic hidden engine room that breathes through the building's snorkel-like cylindrical stair tower. An ozone pre-treatment process kills bugs, followed by filtration and ultraviolet processes before water is pumped into the building's three pools. Once they are full, which takes 50 hours, the water is then continually re-blended, with a two-day water change rate ensuring the pools, including the exposed rooftop pool, maintain a minimum temperature of 33.5[degrees]C from the 44[degrees]C water source. [GRAPHIC OMITTED] Throughout the building the structure and the spaces are beautifully integrated, with internal pool, steam rooms, treatment rooms and even the rooftop pool responding to the columns' dominant form. Materially, a fine balance is struck between luxury and practicality and, where new meets old, good interventionist manners apply, with the junction between the two articulated in plan and section by glass. From Grimshaw's first sketches, the concept has remained clear. But, as with all concepts, there are inevitable compromises. Internally, the dry treatment suite with its carpet and timber floor is rather out of place at the heart of the wet cube. The solitary column in the reception area which, as a key architectural incident is neither subtle nor celebrated, could have been more distinguished when seen against Baldwin's sweeping colonnade colonnade (kŏlənād`), a row of columns usually supporting a roof. Colonnades were popular with the Greeks and Romans, who employed them in the stoa and the portico; they have continued to be used throughout the Middle Ages, the and Cross Bath. More significantly however, the external legibility leg·i·ble adj. 1. Possible to read or decipher: legible handwriting. 2. Plainly discernible; apparent: legible weaknesses in character and disposition. of Grimshaw's cube has been slightly lost as a result of the planners' insistence that the adjoining service core should be clad with Bath stone. While easily discernible in plan, the shift from stack bond to traditionally bonded ashlar is too subtle to distinguish the two forms from the street, and alternatives such as render and lead were simply not permitted. But these are minor points. In contrast to his more muscular urban interventions, such as Berlin (AR January 1999) and London (AR October 2002), this is Grimshaw reduced and refined, responding well to the urban scale of Bath and the human scale of the bathers. New words have been added to his repertoire. Grimshaw chooses the term 'style-lite' to describe this building, responding to the essence of the context rather than apeing its image or getting too carried away with his trademark articulation of each and every joint. Even project architect David Pryce, who one may expect to be more concerned with points of detail after years on-site, expressed his observations with a refreshing subtlety sub·tle·ty n. pl. sub·tle·ties 1. The quality or state of being subtle. 2. Something subtle, especially a nicety of thought or a fine distinction. , making a special effort to describe 'the delightful and magical surprises of glass and reflections, steam and scent' over and above the detail of specific components. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] [GRAPHIC OMITTED] [GRAPHIC OMITTED] [GRAPHIC OMITTED] [GRAPHIC OMITTED] [GRAPHIC OMITTED] [GRAPHIC OMITTED] [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] [GRAPHIC OMITTED] [GRAPHIC OMITTED] [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] In bringing his new cube to this city of shapes, Grimshaw has come full circle. Not only geographically, returning to the region where he built two factories for Herman Miller Herman Miller may refer to:
From Grimshaw's early associations with Archigram, there has been much evidence of his interest in modular notions of the Plug-In City. However, what he is less known for, and what this project demonstrates more than any other, is his view that the city, like a threadbare fabric, needs to be repaired with new strands, rather than replaced with a whole new outfit. His work has moved from outskirts to city centres, and in the spa--with its public-spirited brief, its rooftop lookout post and the urban glimpses it offers visitors from its new public interior--Grimshaw has produced a building that lets people get under the skin of this predominantly skin-deep picture-postcard city. Now, Bath is revealed from inside out. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] 1 At this time it was impossible to adequately describe the contribution made by Donald Insall Associates. Needless to say, their expertise and meticulous restoration work was significant, worthy of its own review, and Grimshaw recognized the benefits of Insall's input. |
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