Friday 31 December 2010

Waterloo Road, London

Bit of a vague title to the post but can't see the road number on any of my photos or Streetview...also no real clue as to it's identity from the signage so if anyone can help me out in identifying it's provenance I'd be grateful.

If you have a look at it on the satellite image it appears on the corner of Waterloo Road and Sandell Street and you can see it's quite big, mixed use, offices with residential high-rise behind with the highest tower at 20+ storeys.

Lot's of nice details here and many personal favourites such as the sloping brick plinth...

An earlier post on William Whitfield featured Oriel House, a building from , I would guess, a similar date and likewise combining dark brick with framed/curtain wall construction - see here - and although I really love the medieval-ness of the brickwork in the Whitfield the marriage here of the two different flavours is much more comfortable (actually, thinking about it...I'd put this building a bit earlier than Whitfield's...say 1977 vs 1985???).





  
The two images above show the office space facing onto Waterloo Road and are flanked by a much lower part presumably to bring the scale of the street facade down to that of the adjoining buildings:

 ...with a little bit of the Classical to welcome you to the 'Gasgoine Room'.

More later on the relationship between Classicism and Brutalism....

2 comments:

  1. The brick smaller windowed bits are the Union Jack Club with offices by Fitzroy Robinson & Partners 1975-76.

    The pedimented entrance appeared c.1990 IIRC it was originally more prominent - perhaps toned down more recently with a coat of brown paint to match the rest of the glazing.

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  2. Thanks for the info Lang Rabbie - particularly name of architects as had had no luck tracking them down. Fitzroy Robinson certainly did seem on song in the 70s (see earlier post on Sampson House). I must do a more comprehensive survey of their output in that decade.
    Interesting article here... http://manchesterhistory.net/architecture/1970/unionjackclub.html
    ...suggesting that the build quality was poor which strange as it looks pretty solidly built and detailed to me, on the outside at least.

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