Frankenstein in Leicester

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Leicester University Engineering Building
Architect: Stirling and Gowan 1959

In the engineering building at the University of Leicester by Stirling and Gowan, the profession was presented with its Frankenstein, amidst a concert of maidenish squeaks that have not yet died down.*

Steve Cadman has produced an excellent photo set of Leicester buildings. View the Leicester architecture slide-show at fast speed and see Stirling’s Leicester Engineering Building in the context of the vigorous and eclectic architecture of the city.

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Steve Cadman’s Leicester architecture set

* Ian Brown in Architectural Forum April 1972, quoted in James Stirling, Buildings and Projects 1950-1974 Introduction by John Jacobus, Layout by Leon Krier and James Stirling.

Photographs © Steve Cadman

James Stirling 22 April 1926 – 25 June 1992

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Messages from Portugal

Our recent post about Evora has led to some interesting correspondence with Portuguese architects and students. rui-mello sends us some images of the work of Joaquim Massena. The project is a theatre in Oporto. The work of Massena, which appears to be a mixture of new buildings and renovation projects can be found at www.joaquimmassena.com.

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You may also like to look at ultimasmag which is an internet periodical produced by Fernando Guerra and contains exceptional photographs of contemporary architecture in Portugal. The latest issue includes pictures of Alvaro Siza’s new winery. From ultimasmag.com:

After recent intermittent or even timid architectural interventions in wineries in the Douro region, this completely new project in the Alentejo brings a practice to national wine production that is beginning to be common in the wineries of countries like Spain, France, Italy and the United States, in which wine production and commercialization start with the buildings themselves, contributing added value, giving them their own identity, beyond creating a more efficient system of production. The return on investment also translates in the marketing of the wine production itself, providing it with an image that coincides with the cult of wine.

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James Stirling: History Faculty

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Taken inside James Stirling’s History Faculty Building at the University of Cambridge, 1967.

James Stirling 22 April 1926 – 25 June 1992

Posted in CiA, Dominic Roberts, James Stirling, Nostalgia | 1 Comment

First of the Star Architects?

This month marks the fifteenth anniversary of the death of James Stirling during a botched hernia operation. We will be publishing a series of posts remembering and celebrating the great architect.

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The critic Colin Rowe claimed that James Stirling’s mother confided the architect had been conceived in New York harbour, precisely at the old Cunard pier at the end of West 46th Street. Here is his birth chart for the co-ordinates

Né le 22 avril 1924 à 14h45
à Glasgow (Royaume-Uni)
Soleil en 2°09 Taureau, AS en 5°03 Vierge,
Lune en 14°10 Sagittaire, MC en 24°42 Taureau

James Stirling 22 April 1926 – 25 June 1992

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Slow Home TV

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A familiar face at Slow Home TV – Sally Stone of CiA and co-author of Re-readings.
CLICK HERE to get to the Slow Home TV page and view the full interview.

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Two houses

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House of the Suicide and House of the Mother of the Suicide by John Hejduk, Prague Castle, 2000.

Georgia Institute of Technology
Canadian Centre for Architecture.
Architecture Week
and for a fuller explanation…
Books by John Hejduk
Photograph taken at Prague Castle, 2000

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Whitsun action

Ice Cream On Hand
Picture by (yet again) “eat at joe’s”

Some juxtapositions of temporary and permanent at the annual Whit Fair in the centre of Preston. Pericles is safe in his pediment. See the same event in 1930 via the link below (may require Real Player or somesuch i.e. the BBC don’t do QuickTime):

LINK to film of the same event and location in 1930

The same location in the ‘fifties with the partially demolished town hall to the side of the square:

harris & flag market

See also: Appearing Rooms

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Card No.17

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Edgar Wood. Ed Wood

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Jonathan Meades

As CiA suspected Jonathan Meades had something to say about Manchester’s urban regeneration. Here is a clip…

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Alvaro Siza in Evora

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Further to the recent post about James Stirling’s housing in Runcorn we present these images of Alvaro Siza’s project for housing in Quinta da Malagueira outside the ancient city of Evora. Begun in 1977, the neighbourhood is an immediate product of the revolution of the carnations in 1974 and the work of SAAL. The morphology of the original Roman settlement is continued through the design of 1200 low-cost, single family units, with arcades to the public areas. Harvard University Graduate School of Design recognised the design with the award in 1988 of the Prince of Wales Prize.

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MSA Fieldtrip Films also features the work of Siza in the very different context of Berlin with the ‘Bonjour Tristesse’ project for the IBA.

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Sandy

Professor Sir Colin St. John Wilson RA 1922-2007

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Continuity in Architecture was saddened to hear of the death of ‘Sandy’ Wilson, a major figure in British architecture and architectural education in the second half of the twentieth century. A memory which has survived the passing of the years is that of a kind mentor and his professorial office dominated by a large Patrick Caulfield painting.The obituaries in the major British newspapers linked below refer to his professional life especially as architect of the British Library, and his collection of contemporary art which was donated to the Pallant House Gallery in Chichester. The photographs show an early work, the extension to the Cambridge School of Architecture, a small demonstration of Corbusian brutalism and the scene of the first airings of Wilson’s ruminations on architectural theory published in ‘Architectural Reflections’ and ‘The Other Tradition of Modern Architecture’. Less intellectual memories of the extension include a Halloween party in ‘The Pit’ (alas, sans its original built-in concrete coffee table) where Dalibor Vesely was seen grooving in a ‘Starsky & Hutch’ style wrap-over belted cardigan, while the lecture theatre itself was the venue for the 1978 Christmas Revue ‘Waiting for Wilson’, (a Beckettian homage to the often necessarily absent professor) which ended on a rousing rendition of the contemporaneous John Travolta hit ‘Sandy’ from the soundtrack of ‘Grease’.

The Times
The Guardian
The Daily Telegraph
The Independent

Posted in Aventinus, CiA, Friends & Acquaintances, Name Dropping | 1 Comment

Quite a big weekend

Looville - Moor Park Preston

Preston is the centre of the pop-musical world this weekend. It’s the biggest event in the town/city since, well, last Preston Guild. The View, The Scissor Sisters, Razorlight, Kasabian, LCD Sound System…(full line-up) are all bringing their cutting-edge/reminiscentoftheseventies sounds to a fenced enclosure that has been constructed on Moor Park for Radio 1’s ‘Big Weekend’.

Wikipedia says: “Created in 1833-35, the park is reputed to be the first in which the inalienable right of public access was assured. Moor Park is Preston’s largest and oldest park and was originally common land derived from the Royal Forest of Fulwood by the Charter of Henry III of England in 1235. It was one of the first public parks in the country.” Claiming to be “first” may or may not be true but smacks of Manchester-style boosterism so we’ll refuse to be impressed.

Now, has Alex Davis got any spare tickets?

Picture by “eat at joe’s”

Preston Found

Postscript: If you haven’t got a ticket this is for you.

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