Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,550,480 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Geography lesson: this addition to a historic institution responds sensitively to context and landscape.


Site of the infamous (and now unlikely to be built) Libeskind Spiral, London's Exhibition Road has been the focus of a long-running debate about the appropriateness of bold new architecture in sensitive historic contexts. Sweeping down from Hyde Park Hyde Park, park, London, England
Hyde Park, 615 acres (249 hectares) in Westminster borough, London, England. Once the manor of Hyde, a part of the old Westminster Abbey property, it became a deer park under Henry VIII.
, it boasts an array of heavyweight Victorian institutions (the V & A, Science Museum and Imperial College), all trying to reinvent themselves for the new century. At its north end a simple pavilion of brick and glass signposts Studio Downie's new extension to the Royal Geographical Society The Royal Geographical Society is a British learned society founded in 1830 with the name Geographical Society of London for the advancement of geographical science, under the patronage of King William IV.  (RGS RGS Royal Geographical Society
RGS Rio Grande do Sul (Brazilian State)
RGS Regulators of G Protein Signaling
RGS Royal Grammar School (England)
RGS Royal Grammar School (UK) 
), emblematic of the dust being gently blown off one of Britain's most venerable institutions.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Founded in 1830, the RGS is a club for the globally intrepid, with explorers, naturalists and military strategists among its members. Its geographical collection is the world's largest and encompasses over two million items--from maps to Darwin's sextant sextant, instrument for measuring the altitude of the sun or another celestial body; such measurements can then be used to determine the observer's geographical position or for other navigational, surveying, or astronomical applications. . Since 1913 it has been housed in the comfortable confines of Lowther Lodge For other uses, see Lowther.
Lowther Lodge is a house in South Kensington, London, England, immediately south of Hyde Park. It was designed by Richard Norman Shaw and built between approximately 1872 and 1875.
, a handsome Norman Shaw villa overlooking Hyde Park to the north and a walled garden Refers to a network or service that restricts its users to its own content. Cable TV and satellite TV are walled gardens, offering a finite number of channels and programs to its subscribers.  to the south. In 1930 a lecture hall lecture hall nsala de conferencias;
(UNIV) → aula

lecture hall lecture namphithéâtre m

 was added at the corner of Kensington Gore Kensington Gore is a street in central London, England, the same name having been formerly used for the piece of land on which it stands. It runs along the south side of Hyde Park, continuing as Kensington Road to both the east and west.  and Exhibition Road. Storage problems and limited public access prompted the society to embark on this latest addition, consolidating its relationship with Studio Downie, who had earlier been commissioned to remodel re·mod·el  
tr.v. re·mod·eled also re·mod·elled, re·mod·el·ing also re·mod·el·ling, re·mod·els also re·mod·els
To make over in structure or style; reconstruct.
 and refurbish the original lecture theatre.

The new parts house a reading room and an exhibition space, which are treated in very different ways. The exhibition space is a lightweight pavilion floating along the edge of Exhibition Road, marking a new public entrance; by contrast the reading room is dug into the courtyard garden and is a virtually imperceptible, bunkered, subterranean presence. The two parts are linked by a helical helical /hel·i·cal/ (hel´i-k'l) spiral (1).

hel·i·cal
adj.
1. Of or having the shape of a helix; spiral.

2. Having a shape approximating that of a helix.
 stair that sweeps down in a supple curve from the new entrance hall that anchors the north edge of the exhibition space. The long volume of the entrance resembles a telescope, with a tall glazed aperture framing a glimpse of the Royal Albert Royal Albert may refer to several places named in memory of Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha:
  • Royal Albert Hall
  • Royal Albert Bridge
  • Royal Albert Dock
 Hall on the far west side of the RGS. An umbilical corridor leads through from the entrance hall connecting the new pavilion with the lecture hall and Lowther Lodge.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Bookended by planes of handmade red brick and crowned by a hovering roof of silvered copper, the pavilion houses a large exhibition space, overlooking the formerly secret garden. On the Exhibition Road side, a 20m-long glass wall incorporating images from the society's collection forms a visually permeable boundary. Openness--both physical and institutional--is a key aspect of the scheme. The public has access to the new L-shaped reading room, a cool underground cave tucked under the pavilion and the existing extended terrace adjoining Lowther Lodge. A continuous slot of angled glazing running around the perimeter admits light and offers contemplative views out over the garden. The relationship between a new glazed volume, Victorian brick buildings and garden quad irresistibly recalls ABK's Keble College (AR December 1977), but here a lush flowering vine is trained around the glazing to create a light and heat-diffusing green screen, which merges the building more intimately with the landscape. Increased storage space for the society's precious archive is also housed below ground.

A model of thoughtfulness and elegant understatement, Studio Downie's scheme is also highly ecologically aware, maximising the use of daylight and natural ventilation and minimising energy consumption by employing thermal mass in the basement and in the pavilion's concrete roof. Specially built furniture, such as the reception desks in the entrance hall and reading room and glass display screens in the exhibition space, adds to the sense of things being done properly and well, despite the constraints of history, context, site and public opinion. All told, an object lesson in modern urban etiquette. C.S.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
COPYRIGHT 2004 EMAP Architecture
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:Architectural services
Publication:The Architectural Review
Geographic Code:4EUUK
Date:Sep 1, 2004
Words:640
Previous Article:Divine intervention: Renzo Piano's huge new basilica in southern Italy reconciles the spiritual and practical needs of modern pilgrims.(Architectural...
Next Article:Flower Tower: wrapped in an outer layer of bamboo, this housing block is a vertical urban garden.(Residential construction)
Topics:



Related Articles
Town Green of the Global Village: Times Square reborn.
Radiant star: these new headquarters for a German finance company are a creative reinterpretation of the edge of town office.(Behnisch & Partner...
Teaching an old cat new tricks; when working in the physical and theoretical shadow of Jacobsen and Banham, within a masterplan that was alleged not...
Something old, something new.(Design)(seniors' housing in Watertown MA)
Swanke Hayden Connell Architects (SHCA).(Whos's news: in construction & design)(Brief Article)
Bawa--genius of the place.(View)( Geoffrey Bawa )
State preservationists announce 2005 grants program.(Associations: events, awards)
Pierre Thibault: Cistercian Abbey, Quebec, Canada.(Community)(Brief Article)
Dining terrace: this restaurant in Portugal's rugged north responds to and celebrates its wild setting.
Modern matters: as one of the UK's emerging experts in Conservation Architecture, Geoff Rich was recently awarded a Winston Churchill Memorial Trust...

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles