Marsham Towers

The Marsham Towers were three towers situated on the corner of Marsham Street and Great Peter Street in Westminster, London. They served as the headquarters of the Department of the Environment. The redevelopment of the site was long planned. The site was originally a gas works and had first included two gas holders (built 1875), renovated in World War 2 for use as bomb shelter 'citadels' - the North Rotunda and the South Rotunda. A new 'Steel-Framed Building' was also added in 1940-41. The Rotundas were designed to survive the impact of a 500lb bomb and had 12 foot thick concrete roofs. In 1943 the lowest level of the North Rotunda (codenamed Anson) was kitted out as the reserve to the Cabinet War Rooms. The previous reserve Paddock in Dollis Hill was seen to be unsatisfactory and too far from Whitehall. By the early 1960s the increasing numbers of civil servants led to the commissioning of Eric Bedford (1909 - 2001), Chief Architect for the Ministry of Public Buildings and Works, to design a headquarters building for three separate ministries. His design, published in 1963, placed three twenty-storey slab blocks parallel north to south on top of a three-storey podium slab raised on stilts. Each tower was 66 metres tall and had exposed concrete framing, being built in a new 'box-shell' system which mixed pre-cast concrete and on-site construction. The towers were completed in 1971 and incorporated the Rotundas in the base. The Rotundas were used as a communcations centre and a civil service sports club, amongst other things. By the time the towers were complete, the three separate ministries had merged into the Department of the Environment, and having separate towers proved inefficient. The bland frontage of the blocks, described in Nikolaus Pevsner's architectural guides as "the very image of faceless bureaucracy", was much criticised and local people nicknamed them as "the three ugly sisters". By 1990 repairs cost 50 million per annum and the returning Secretary of State Michael Heseltine announced on February 6, 1992 that he proposed to knock the building down. In 1996 an architectural competition was held for a mixed-use replacement but did not produce a clear outcome. Eventually it was decided to build a replacement for the Home Office on the site and the towers were taken down in 2002-03. The site is now occupied by Sir Terry Farrell's new building which the Home Office first occupied in February 2005.

External link

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
daniel jackson
hectometre
aspropyrgos
george foster peabody
calico critters
islamist terrorism
grant medical college and sir jamsetjee jeejebhoy group of hospitals
kallithea
krinau
bel air, maryland
triarii
d.c. scorpio
bel air, allegany county, maryland
cresaptown, maryland
hatamoto
crashlander
generalised f mean
principes
brian heap
michael jackson (gubernatorial candidate)
lydia cabrera
christian terrorism
matrix scheme
list of thai field marshals
tcs vesuvius
johnny hardwick
penicillium notatum
captain eo
afton
tcs midway
purdah
ara isla de los estados
supermarket sweep
viken
unixware
slave i
standard electrode potential
thomas dorsey
sanofi aventis
richard mellon scaife
s class submarine
department for the environment
buddy guy
the aventis prizes for science books