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Euston Station
Pyromancer wrote: Euston is pretty much a lost cause, I think. The only real solution would be to send a team of trainee architects untainted by the scourge of "modernism" to examine St Pancras, and Glasgow Central, and Manchester Piccadilly, and learn how a main line terminus station should be designed, with beautiful and imposing buildings, a glass roof supported by impressive-looking steelwork, and using traditional materials like brick and stone. And of course to include a replica of the "arch". I don't know. Despite its faults, Euston does at least get one thing right: it keeps the trains firmly out of sight of the concourse. For many people, it's bad enough having to make a long journey by train, without having to be reminded of how depressing trains can be by actually having to look at them while you wait. That's one thing that St Pancras only managed to get right with the latest redevelopment, giving us that new basement-level shopping mall and concourse, tucked nicely away from the trains. (After all, unlike stations, shopping malls are places that most people actually enjoy visiting spending time in.) And before it was redeveloped, St Pancras was one of the bleakest, gloomiest, most depressing stations in London. |
Euston Station
On Sun, 1 Feb 2009 13:31:20 +0000, Pyromancer wrote
Euston is pretty much a lost cause, I think. The only real solution would be to send a team of trainee architects untainted by the scourge of "modernism" to examine St Pancras, and Glasgow Central, and Manchester Piccadilly, and learn how a main line terminus station should be designed, with beautiful and imposing buildings, a glass roof supported by impressive-looking steelwork, and using traditional materials like brick and stone. Given that the railway is supposed to be the transport mode of the future - new major terminals should reflect the best we can offer today. By all means keep the best of what's gone before - the recent rebirth of St Pancras shows how well that can be done, but pastiche and/or replica doesn't suit a modern public building such as (say) Euston. Look at Chep Lap Kok, built from scratch to do the job and act as a state of the art structure into the bargain. No-one would have seriously suggested that the terminal should have been a replica of Kai Tak. In it's day Euston was a staggering building; a true examplar of Britain's New Railway. Sadly it's since been debased to a point where it's of no real architectural merit and barely functions as an effective public space. Zaha Hadid, IM Pei, Frank Gehry, even Richard Rogers, could produce a stunning terminal but, as you say, "that'd cost money, and no-one in the DfT (who at the end of the day pay for such things) seems to believe that it's important for the capital city terminus of one of our most prestigious routes should be anything other than dull and utilitarian" |
Euston Station
On 1 Feb, 14:49, Stimpy wrote:
Given that the railway is supposed to be the transport mode of the future - new major terminals should reflect the best we can offer today. There's no justification in claiming that classicism isn't the best we can offer today. pastiche and/or replica doesn't suit a modern public building such as (say) Euston. The new design is a pastiche. Its a pastiche of 60s modernism. Look at Chep Lap Kok Very clinical isn't it. In it's day Euston was a staggering building That day was before the 1960s. Zaha Hadid, IM Pei, Frank Gehry, even Richard Rogers, could produce a stunning terminal No. They could produce an eyesore. They've done that before. |
Euston Station
In message , at 14:39:11 on Sun, 1 Feb
2009, solar penguin remarked: That's one thing that St Pancras only managed to get right with the latest redevelopment, giving us that new basement-level shopping mall and concourse, tucked nicely away from the trains. It's only "tucked away" from the domestic trains because the latter have been relegated to a windswept 1950's loo-wall structure built entirely outside the original station, and a route-march from the rest of humanity. -- Roland Perry |
Euston Station
"lonelytraveller" wrote in message ... Zaha Hadid, IM Pei, Frank Gehry, even Richard Rogers, could produce a stunning terminal No. They could produce an eyesore. They've done that before. Before advocating Zaha Hadid as an architect for any project, check out the analysis done by a Real Firefighter (tm) on her Fire Station (in Germany IIRC). -- Tim http://tim-fenton.fotopic.net/ |
Euston Station
On Sat, 31 Jan 2009 17:12:55 -0800 (PST), lonelytraveller
wrote: I don't know why they bother wasting the money; they're planning to build an ugly monstrosity that's nearly identical to the horrific inhumanity that's there now. ITYM very effective station. It's warm, bright, spacious and accessible (OK, the platforms aren't, but it isn't designed for you to wait on them, except for the commuter services). A fine station by all accounts, and one that so long as it is structurally sound could carry on as it is for another 20 years. The one thing I'd change is to add a barriered walkway either up the middle or up both sides, marked for people not to stand there, so people can reach the platforms from the outside world without crowd-dodging. Neil -- Neil Williams Put my first name before the at to reply. |
Euston Station
On Sun, 1 Feb 2009 14:39:11 -0000, "solar penguin"
wrote: That's one thing that St Pancras only managed to get right with the latest redevelopment, giving us that new basement-level shopping mall and concourse, tucked nicely away from the trains. I find it claustrophobic compared with Euston's high-ceilinged Great Hall, which is certainly deserving of the name. I wasn't impressed with St P, to be honest. It feels unfinished, scruffy and poorly-designed. The trainshed is indeed impressive, but that's all, and I don't go to stations to look at architecture, but to catch trains. Paddington is another example of a station that "looks nice" but is poorly-designed for the passenger. Cold and reeking of diesel fumes, and "The Lawn" (why's it called that? No grass...) is far too packed in. Neil -- Neil Williams Put my first name before the at to reply. |
Euston Station
On Sun, 1 Feb 2009 05:02:36 -0800 (PST), Martin Petrov
wrote: We had been speculating yesterday that it might be the start of a temporary ticket office, which made a bit of sense, except I didn't recall seeing anything on here (or elsewhere) about a definite start to the work. It isn't for that. It's for retail space to replace (and add to) that which was removed to make more circulating space inside the station. I think they're aiming at a kind of outdoors version of Manc Picc. Neil -- Neil Williams Put my first name before the at to reply. |
Euston Station
In message , Neil Williams
writes I wasn't impressed with St P, to be honest. [...] The trainshed is indeed impressive, but that's all, There are some nice features on the ground floor, but the overwhelming impression is of just another shopping mall, which will probably go the way of many such places in the current economic climate. Paddington is another example of a station that "looks nice" but is poorly-designed for the passenger. Cold and reeking of diesel fumes, and "The Lawn" (why's it called that? No grass...) is far too packed in. IIRC, the lawn was once part of the stationmaster's garden. -- Paul Terry |
Euston Station
Neil Williams wrote:
On Sun, 1 Feb 2009 14:39:11 -0000, "solar penguin" wrote: That's one thing that St Pancras only managed to get right with the latest redevelopment, giving us that new basement-level shopping mall and concourse, tucked nicely away from the trains. I find it claustrophobic compared with Euston's high-ceilinged Great Hall, which is certainly deserving of the name. I wasn't impressed with St P, to be honest. It feels unfinished, scruffy and poorly-designed. The trainshed is indeed impressive, but that's all, and I don't go to stations to look at architecture, but to catch trains. They could raise the money to make it look finished by charging a quid to everyone who says "yes, the old bit looks nice, but when are they going to put something permanent in place of that temporary bit where the MML/EMT/Thameslink/FCC on a weekend go from?" The last time I was playing "hunt the snorbans train" I was surprised to find there are no ticket machines around the MML platforms, you have to go downstairs. -- Arthur Figgis Surrey, UK |
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