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#1
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![]() I'm catching up with the rather excellent "The Architecture The Railways Built" on channel "Yesterday". They mention that Kings Cross was listed in 1954 as one of the oldest London termini, after Euston. Which kind of begs the question, why wasn't Euston listed as well? Or was it demolished in the 1960s despite being already listed? I had previously been led to believe that the concept of listed buildings only came about after outrage at the demolition of Euston, but that would appear to be incorrect. -- Basil Jet recently enjoyed listening to James White - 1983 - James White's Flaming Demonics |
#2
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On Sun, 17 May 2020 19:18:13 +0100, Basil Jet
wrote: I'm catching up with the rather excellent "The Architecture The Railways Built" on channel "Yesterday". They mention that Kings Cross was listed in 1954 as one of the oldest London termini, after Euston. Which kind of begs the question, why wasn't Euston listed as well? Or was it demolished in the 1960s despite being already listed? I had previously been led to believe that the concept of listed buildings only came about after outrage at the demolition of Euston, but that would appear to be incorrect. The first national list of protected buildings was created by the Town and Country Planning Act 1947. Prior to that, individual local authorities could, and some did, protect major monuments (eg, the likes ot Stonehenge, or ancient cathedrals) from modification or removal, but it was a somewhat haphazard approach. The reason Kings Cross was listed and Euston wasn't, is that Euston had already been signficiantly modified internally by then whereas Kings Cross hadn't. So there wasn't much about Euston station itself which merited preserving. The issue at Euston was specifically the arch. That wasn't listed in the years immediately following the creation of the TCPA, because at the time it wasn't generally policy to list only part of a whole, and it was felt that the arch had no significance apart from the rest of the station - which, in itself, didn't merit listing. And then in the 1960s, the government decided not to list the arch because they felt that to do so would impose unreasonable costs on the British Transport Commission's plans to rebuild the station. The minister who made the final decision was Ernest Marples, a name which is likely to be familiar to readers in these parts. Despite the level of controversy at the time, the demolition of the arch didn't really prompt any change in listed buildings policy, almost certainly because the government was entirely complicit in approving the arch's destruction and had no desire to do anything which might paint its own actions in a bad light. What later did trigger a change was the demolition the art deco Firestone factory in 1980. In this case, it was suspected that the government ws planning to list it, so the owners demolished it rapidly (over a bank holiday weekend!) before that could happen. In response to the public outcry, the government instituted a major resurvey of buildings to ensure that nothing which merited preservation had been missed off the original lists. The mid to late 80s saw the largest number of buildings added to the list, with over 36,000 being added in 1987 alone. Mark |
#3
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Mark Goodge wrote:
On Sun, 17 May 2020 19:18:13 +0100, Basil Jet wrote: I'm catching up with the rather excellent "The Architecture The Railways Built" on channel "Yesterday". They mention that Kings Cross was listed in 1954 as one of the oldest London termini, after Euston. Which kind of begs the question, why wasn't Euston listed as well? Or was it demolished in the 1960s despite being already listed? I had previously been led to believe that the concept of listed buildings only came about after outrage at the demolition of Euston, but that would appear to be incorrect. The first national list of protected buildings was created by the Town and Country Planning Act 1947. Prior to that, individual local authorities could, and some did, protect major monuments (eg, the likes ot Stonehenge, or ancient cathedrals) from modification or removal, but it was a somewhat haphazard approach. The reason Kings Cross was listed and Euston wasn't, is that Euston had already been signficiantly modified internally by then whereas Kings Cross hadn't. So there wasn't much about Euston station itself which merited preserving. The issue at Euston was specifically the arch. That wasn't listed in the years immediately following the creation of the TCPA, because at the time it wasn't generally policy to list only part of a whole, and it was felt that the arch had no significance apart from the rest of the station - which, in itself, didn't merit listing. And then in the 1960s, the government decided not to list the arch because they felt that to do so would impose unreasonable costs on the British Transport Commission's plans to rebuild the station. The minister who made the final decision was Ernest Marples, a name which is likely to be familiar to readers in these parts. Despite the level of controversy at the time, the demolition of the arch didn't really prompt any change in listed buildings policy, almost certainly because the government was entirely complicit in approving the arch's destruction and had no desire to do anything which might paint its own actions in a bad light. What later did trigger a change was the demolition the art deco Firestone factory in 1980. In this case, it was suspected that the government ws planning to list it, so the owners demolished it rapidly (over a bank holiday weekend!) before that could happen. In response to the public outcry, the government instituted a major resurvey of buildings to ensure that nothing which merited preservation had been missed off the original lists. The mid to late 80s saw the largest number of buildings added to the list, with over 36,000 being added in 1987 alone. Ob. recent discussion: Steventon Bridge was listed in 1988... Anna Noyd-Dryver |
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