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The Twentieth Century Society exists
to safeguard the heritage of architecture and design
in Britain from 1914 onwards. One of the Societys
prime objectives is education, with education comes
appreciation. With conservation, another prime
objective, comes the continued opportunity for extending
our knowledge about those buildings or artifacts, whether
important or humble, rare or commonplace as the red
telephone kiosk, that characterise the Twentieth Century
in Britain.
As a result of our lobbying over the
past twenty years, many buildings have already been
saved. A notable success in 1993-4 was our campaign
to persuade the National Trust to take on the Hampstead
house of the Hungarian emigré architect Ernö
Goldfinger, at 2 Willow Road, NW3, making it available
for visitors. We hope other important modern houses
will also be opened to the public in this manner in
the course of time.
The new Tate Gallery, housed in a
spectacular Thameside building by Sir Giles Gilbert
Scott at Bankside opened in 2000 and contains the Nations
collection of modern works by non-British artists.
Swiss architects Herzog & de Meuron of Basle won
the competition for the design of the new building
in 1997. Bankside Power Station, as it was known
until decommissioning in 1970, is a powerful work by
Scott, dominating the Southwark skyline. The Conservative
government turned down our request for listing the building
several times, despite the clear merits of the building.
Finding this new use for it has saved it for the Nation.
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