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The
landward side, 2000
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The
seaward side, 1979
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View
of staircase, 1979
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The Midland Hotel at Morecambe
in Lancashire has been central to the interests
of the Twentieth Century Society since we were
founded - as the Thirties Society - in 1979 for
it is one of the most famous and stylish new buildings
of the 1930s. Streamlined in form and aerodynamic
in plan with its convex frontage overlooking Morecambe
Bay, with its flat roof and rounded corners, it
is at once Modern and modernistic (Art Deco?),
informed by the Continental aesthetic of the Modern
Movement and yet somehow flashy and slightly vulgar
- as befits a seaside hotel. It was built in 1932-33
by the London Midland & Scottish Railway both
to improve its own image and to revitalise a tired
Victorian resort at a time of economic depression.
As such, its modernity was a symbol of hope and
when it opened it was given extravagant coverage
with purple-tinted photographs in the glossy pages
of the Architectural Review.
The Midland Hotel was the work
of that versatile and stylish architect Oliver
Hill, who could turn his hand to Classical, Tudor
or Modern with equal accomplishment. But the interest
of the building is not just the architecture for
several remarkable contemporary works of art were
commissioned for it. Most of these were by Eric
Gill, who modelled two seahorses like Morecambe
shrimps at the top of the central convex entrance
bay and painted a circular plaster relief on the
ceiling above the circular staircase within. Gill
was also responsible for a decorative map wall
illustrating the monuments and delights of Lancashire
and a large stone relief of Odysseus Welcomed
from the Sea by Nausica. There were also rugs
by Marion Dorn and a mural by Eric Ravilious in
the circular café with its tables of pink
vitrolite, but this rapidly deteriorated.
The glamour of the Midland Hotel
did not quite survive requisitioning during the
Second World War although it remained an hotel
until recently. Instead, it became a remarkable
and evocative period piece and so - inevitably
- was used for one of Brian Eastmans clever
Poirot television films - for which the Ravilious
mural was recreated in the café. In 1979,
the Gill stone relief had been dismantled for
display in the Thirties exhibition
at the Hayward Gallery. Unfortunately, it was
not replaced in its original position when it
was returned. Even more unfortunately, it went
missing in 1998 after being lent to the Gill Exhibition
at the Barbican, though how six tons of stone
could disappear without anyone noticing seemed
curious. Eventually it was found, neatly packed,
round about the time when the owner of the hotel,
under investigation by the police, suddenly died.
The Midland - like Morecambe
- is now very sad. Although it is listed at Grade
II*, its doors are closed, its metal windows corroding,
its external render peeling and cracking. But
the building remains a landmark and is still loved,
and last year the Friends of the Midland Hotel,
Morecambe were founded to agitate for its restoration
[see www.midlandhotel.org].
The latest news is that the derelict building
has been bought by Kalber Leisure Ltd who intend
restoring it "to its former glory".
This is most welcome, except that the current
plans involve adding a new glazed storey containing
a restaurant on the roof. So this remarkable and
important building is likely to remain a worry
to the Twentieth Century Society for a while yet.
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