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Pasmore Pavilion, Sunny Blunts, Peterlee,
Co. Durham, Victor Pasmore, 1967-70, not listed
Peterlee and its pavilion were the
fruit of the optimistic post-war climate, and their
ideologies have sadly not stood the test of time very
well. [Click for pictures of the Pavilion, View with
houses and the Pavilion's original interior.]
Peterlee New Town was designated in
1948 to establish a recreational and shopping centre
for southeast Durham and to provide alternative employment
for the ex-miners. The initial architect and planner
of the New Town was Berthold Lubetkin. He saw Peterlee
as the apogee of his career, as it would have encapsulated
his life long professional ambitions. Unfortunately
his Masterplan ended up being rejected in 1950 and this
move drove the great architect to resign and retire
from the architectural profession.
Sir George Grenfell Baines, the masterplanner
of Aycliffe New Town, took over the task in 1952 and
started to build very quickly. The quality and design
were soon judged to be poor, and it was decided to bring
in a visual arts consultant to treat the housing and
landscaping as a total concept. Victor Pasmore, the
artist and designer appointed Master of Painting at
Kings College, Newcastle, was selected for his
ideas of the affinity of cubist painting with architecture
in terms of the concept and structure of space.
What ensued was visually exciting flat-roof housing
with brickwork and factory prefabricated timber infill
panels. The houses were grouped as units, into patterns
with patio gardens and courtyards, parking squares and
open spaces, a radical departure from the bland housing
generated by the earlier scheme.
The idea of the Pavilion stemmed from
the need to emphasize the focal point made by the small
lake which separated the road from the pedestrian system.
The Pavilion is actually a sort of abstract concrete
bridge spanning the shallow lake. Victor Pasmore described
it as an architecture and sculpture of purely
abstract form through which to walk, in which to linger
and on which to play, a free and anonymous monument
which, because of its independence, can life the activity
and psychology of an urban housing community on to a
universal plane.
Pasmore was certainly successful in
that as indeed, many people lingered and
played, unfortunately, not of the innocent
sort which was envisaged: the sculpture became canvas
for graffiti and meeting ground for unsociable activities.
Back in 1998, the Pavilion became
a cause celebre when English Heritage recommended that
the structure be listed Grade II* and that Tony Banks,
the then Secretary of State, refused to take EHs
advice partly because of local public hostility
and the fact that it was the scene for undesirable
activities.
The Pavilions fate has been in the balance for
some years and it was rumoured that the local authority
was looking into its possible demolition. However, Easington
District Council has showed considerable maturity in
its outlook and has come to realise that the Pavilion
could act as a catalyst and attract cultural tourism
to this otherwise neglected part of the country. I am
very glad to report that it is now proposed to extend
the lake, so that the Pavilion would stand wholly within
it, and thus protected from attack or misuse in various
ways. This simple initiative would both appease local
concern and ensure that the Pavilion continues to grace
the otherwise rather bland environment.
Although some of the flavour of the
open rolling integration of landscape and architecture
that Pasmore imagined can still be felt, most of the
housing has been altered in appearance, with pitched
roofs and uPVC windows now in abundance. The Pavilion
is certainly the most striking design feature surviving
in a more or less original condition, although it has
suffered vandalism and neglect and can no longer be
crossed as a bridge, as its steps were removed in the
early 1980s. It is certainly the only surviving element
embodying the idealism that once informed Peterlee New
Town and, in national and international terms, is a
very rare example of a truly spatial creation, crossing
the boundaries of art and architecture.
Acknowledgement: A Canny Weekend,
Elain Harwood, C20 event notes, 1995, as well various
items by James Dunnett.
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