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Fit for a queen: Remodelling of part of the Queen's House, Greenwich permits its use as a gallery and improves circulation without disturbing its seventeenth-century architecture. (Interior Design).


The Queen's House in Greenwich was designed by Inigo Jones for Anne of Denmark Anne of Denmark, 1574–1619, queen consort of James I of England (James VI of Scotland), daughter of Frederick II of Denmark and Norway. She married James in 1589. , wife of James I. Built between 1616 and 1635 in the hunting grounds of the Tudor palace of Placentia The Palace of Placentia was an English Royal Palace built by Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester in 1428, in Greenwich, London on the banks of the River Thames. The Palace was demolished and replaced with the Greenwich Hospital (now The Old Royal Naval College) in the late seventeenth , it was an essay in Jones's assured handling of Palladian style and proportion. In contrast to the rambling brick palace which, spread around three courtyards, was the haphazard enlargement of a fifteenth-century mansion, the Queen's House was cool and Classically ordered at the edge of wilderness. Pevsner observes that the building's chastity and bareness must have seemed as foreign to contemporary beholders, used to the entertaining elaborations of Elizabethan and Jacobean architecture, as Modernism was to the Edwardians. In reality, architectural exoticism ex·ot·i·cism  
n.
The quality or condition of being exotic.


exoticism
the condition of being foreign, striking, or unusual in color and design. — exoticist, n.
 must have been tempered by familiar amusements, for the house had a fantastical surprise garden with fountains; its plan too was diverting. The building straddled the public road, between London and Dover, which divided park from palace. In doing so, it became a metaphorical b ridge between the safety of the palace's walled enclosure and the dangerous world outside (or, if you prefer, the rational link between two kinds of chaos: mathematical and physical). H-shaped on plan, the house had two parallel wings, running east-west and connected by a cross-bar at first floor level, above a vaulted basement.

Anne died in 1619 before her house could be completed and building was resumed by Charles I for Henrietta Maria, for whom the house became a garden retreat (there was never a kitchen). Her garden, with formal parterres and patterns, was designed to be viewed from above. In consequence, the basement (below the level of the road) with its handsome brick vaults and windows on to the garden, was blocked off.

Finding the house too small, Henrietta Maria engaged John Webb, Jones's successor and son-in-law, to add two more bridges to the first floor, one to the west and one to the east.

The house we see today is a square block. Facades on all sides, except the south, are tripartite with a central projecting section and plain walls rising from a rusticated rus·ti·cate  
v. rus·ti·cat·ed, rus·ti·cat·ing, rus·ti·cates

v.intr.
To go to or live in the country.

v.tr.
1. To send to the country.

2.
 base and surmounted by a balustrade. On the south side, a first floor loggia loggia

Hall, gallery, or porch open to the air on one or more sides. It evolved in the Mediterranean region as an open sitting room with protection from the sun. It is often a roofed, arcaded open gallery on an upper story overlooking a court, though it can also be a
 with Ionic columns overlooked the garden; on the north, a horseshoe staircase leads in Palladian manner to a terrace and a two-storey cubic hall. Inside the building, ornamented rooms are disposed in symmetrical fashion; to the east of the great hall, the interior is pierced by a circular void containing the famous Tulip Stair (the name deriving from the repeating wrought iron pattern of the balustrade). At the beginning of the nineteenth century, the building was extended by addition of east and west wings linked to the centre by colonnades tracing the path of the old road.

The present owner of the Queen's House, the National Maritime Museum For the equivalents of other nations, see .

The National Maritime Museum (NMM) in Greenwich, England is the leading maritime museum of the United Kingdom. Creation and official opening
The Museum was created by the National Maritime Act of 1934
, has wanted to use the building as a gallery. But its curious plan and difficult circulation, with no disabled access, made it unsuitable. Wishing to stage its millennium exhibition, The Story of Time, the museum invited Allies and Morrison Allies and Morrison are a London-based architecture practice founded by Bob Allies and Graham Morrison in 1984 following their success in the competition for the redesign of the public space at the Mound, Edinburgh. The practice now employs over 200 people.  to explore ways of improving access in, and circulation through, this most sensitive of monuments without upsetting English Heritage.

The practice's solution, with English Heritage agreement, was to restore the basement and transform it into a new public entrance, and in the process to reinstate Jones's original basement door on the north. To the west of the great hall, in a space previously occupied by a contorted staircase and where the basement vault had been breached, they inserted an elegant new three-storey staircase and lift.

Design of the staircase was based on the structural principle of the Tulip Stair, directly opposite on the other side of the great hall. Treads are made of precast concrete units, the load being transferred vertically from tread to tread. A steel string bolted to the face of brick shaft takes the torsion torsion, stress on a body when external forces tend to twist it about an axis. See strength of materials.  load and restrains the risers. The balustrading suggests the sumptuousness of handmade seventeenth-century filigree filigree (fĭl`ĭgrē), ornamental work of fine gold or silver wire, often wrought into an openwork design and joined with matching solder and borax under the flame of the blowpipe.  and the purity of Jones's decorative ornamentation ornamentation

In music, the addition of notes for expressive and aesthetic purposes. For example, a long note may be ornamented by repetition or by alternation with a neighboring note (“trill”); a skip to a nonadjacent note can be filled in with the intervening
. It is made of steel strips plaited plait  
n.
1. A braid, especially of hair.

2. A pleat.

tr.v. plait·ed, plait·ing, plaits
1. To braid.

2. To pleat.

3. To make by braiding.
 into a grid which, when wound around circular riser sections, distorts and echoes the geometric distortions of the black and white marble floor of the great hall. A continuous bronze handrail expresses the curve of the staircase.

Within the basement, the vaulted brickwork has been covered, as it would have originally been, with rough lime render and the spaces made lighter and clearer. Down here are the reception, cloakroom cloak·room  
n.
1. A room where coats and other articles may be left temporarily, as in a theater or school. Also called coatroom.

2. A private lounge adjacent to a legislative chamber.
, shop and lavatories reached by the new public entrance on the north. Facing the river and embraced by the horseshoe staircase, Jones's door leads to a tunnel under the terrace. The door was previously hidden at the bottom of a short flight of steps Noun 1. flight of steps - a stairway (set of steps) between one floor or landing and the next
flight of stairs, flight

staircase, stairway - a way of access (upward and downward) consisting of a set of steps
 that have been replaced by a simple stone forecourt forming a shallow ramp. (Excavation revealed the original brick base of the horseshoe which turned 180 degrees so that the bottom steps faced each other.)

RELATED ARTICLE:

Architect

Allies & Morrison Architects, London

Project team

Bob Allies. DI Haigh

Structural engineer

Harris & Sutherland

Services engineer

Nordale Building Services

Photographs

Peter Cook/VIEW

1 North face with horseshoe staircase to terrace.

2 North face and colonnade to east wing. New public entrance with stone ramp embraced by staircase.

3 From great cubic hall, with black and white marble floor, to new staircase on west.

4 Basement enfilade en·fi·lade  
n.
1. Gunfire directed along the length of a target, such as a column of troops.

2. A target vulnerable to sweeping gunfire.

3.
.

5 New staircase: precast concrete treads, balustrading of plaited steel strips, continuous bronze handrail.
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Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Author:McGuire, Penny
Publication:The Architectural Review
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:4EUUK
Date:Jan 1, 2002
Words:904
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