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Royal College of Art, H T Cadbury-Brown,
with Sir Hugh Casson & Robert Gooden, 1960-63, Listed
grade II
The Royal College of Art sits strikingly
amongst the many Georgian white stuccoed terraces and
red Victorian mansions of Kensington. It was a brave
move on Westminster's part to give the building the
go-ahead in the late fifties, given its context - it
sits right next to the Royal Albert Hall, the Royal
College of Organists and the Albert Memorial. It resides
on one of the most hallowed areas of arts ground, Albertopolis,
reaching from the Victoria and Albert Museum and Natural
History Museum up to Kensington Gardens, and including
two other renowned institutions, the Royal College of
Music and Imperial College.
It is a fitting place for the Royal
College of Art. Although it began its life at Somerset
House in 1837, by 1863 it was housed at the Victoria
and Albert Museum, and has since enjoyed a long history
in this area. The present college buildings were designed
in 1956-59, on an excellent site allocated to the Ministry
of Education for that exact purpose, facing the park
and between the Albert Hall and Queen's Gate, and enabled
by a government grant. This meant that all the departments
and the administration could at last be brought together
on one site for the first time.
The buildings' austere appearance
is perhaps explained by the extremely tight budget,
which led to the use of the simplest materials. The
building was planned as three blocks. The workshop block,
now named the Darwin Building after the Rector at that
time, ran along the northern boundary of the site, where
height was not restricted. The Gulbenkian wing runs
along the east of the site and was made possible by
a generous donation from the Trustees of the Gulbenkian
Foundation, as the government was unable or unwilling
to fund this block. This gave the college a much-needed
hall and exhibition space. A common room block was planned
for the south-west corner of the site, which was to
link to the teaching block by a bridge, and to the Gulbenkian
Hall by a library and lecture theatre.
The college chose to use its own staff
to design the building: H T Cadbury-Brown who taught
in the sculpture department, in association with Sir
Hugh Casson, then Professor of Interior Design, and
Robert Gooden, Professor of Silversmithing and Jewellery.
As staff, not only were they in a unique position to
understand the needs of the college, but also their
authorship firmly ties the design to the institution,
which is most unusual and adds to the historical significance
of the buildings.
The design paid careful attention
to its prestigious site. The Darwin Building has been
limited in height to balance Norman Shaw's Albert Hall
Mansions, which flank the opposite side of the Albert
Hall. The brick cladding chosen is dark in colour in
order to mirror the then uncleaned red brick of the
Shaw buildings, and the regular but broken skyline clearly
responds to the gables of Shaw's block. The design is
confident and stands up well to its neighbours. The
entrance block, the Gulbenkian wing, was deliberately
kept low to allow striking views of the Albert Hall
from the college, and the main college entrance was
specifically placed to facilitate a fantastic view through
the portico of the Albert Hall and on down Kensington
Gore. The relationship between this core group of three
buildings was of utmost importance to the design, and
Cadbury-Brown was keenly aware that they should play
together to obtain a total effect (Royal College
of Art, Kensington The Architect & Building
News,9 June 1965, p 1084). The open space was seen as
an important and impressive part of the setting.
At the time that these college buildings
were commissioned, it was envisaged that the college
would be able to expand onto the site further to the
west, fronting onto Queen's Gate, once the lease expired
in 1973. Provision of accommodation for the Schools
of Painting, Sculpture and Graphic Design would then
be made. However, planning permission was turned down
for this building, again designed by Cadbury-Brown and
team, as it required the demolition of a number of buildings
at the top end of Queen's Gate, which would result in
the proposed new building abutting Norman Shaw's last
remaining house on this road, following the demolition
of two others during the expansion of Imperial College.
An article in The Architectural Review in July 1973
makes many interesting comments about Westminster's
decision not to grant planning permission. It points
out that as it granted permission for the RCA to establish
itself in a new main building, should it not also recognise
the need for the institution to develop? The council
zoned most of this area in 1958 for educational purposes,
thereby firmly recognising the legacy of the 1851 Great
Exhibition. Yet the reviewer claims that under rising
pressure to protect buildings of any character whatsoever,
Nos 197-200 Queen's Gate were listed Grade 3 in 1970,
meaning that the RCA would have to use these buildings
for non-technical education as they were unsuitable
to convert to large studios. In the event, what happened
is that an extension was built at the back of these
buildings to house the remaining departments, entered
from Jays Mews.
The points raised in the article are
interesting, as well as being current. Should Westminster
have granted planning permission? Were they short-sighted
in not doing so? Allowing the development would have
created buildings better suited for use by the arts
college, rather than the odd conversions that have resulted.
But this issue is raised frequently; not least when
the Society is instrumental in listing a building it
feels to be of special architectural interest, but which
may affect future development. The Royal College of
Art was listed in 2001 at Grade II, which recognised
the college as a particularly fine example of a high-quality
cultural institution of the 1960s. The college is still
desperate for space, and its on site options are limited.
The second phase of Cadbury-Brown building, had it been
permitted, would probably have provided more accommodation
than presently on this north-east corner site of Queen's
Gate and Kensington Gore, but even so it is doubtful
whether it would have solved the problem. At present
the sculpture school and half the painting school are
off-site. Obviously, it would be ideal to re-unite all
the departments together on one site, but the resulting
proposal is a scheme to which to Society is wholly opposed.
Nicholas Grimshaw and Partners are
working on a design which would see the complete removal
of the Gulbenkian wing and its replacement with what
has been nicknamed at the college 'The Ellipse' - a
glass building oval in shape, which rests in plan form
at a slight diagonal to the main Darwin Building, and
which reaches up in height to the main building's double-height
spaces at sixth floor level. The Society views the entrance
block as an intrinsic part of the design, and believes
that it balances against the austere bulk of the taller
buildings and forms an entrance that is clearly expressed
and which is human in scale. Cadbury-Brown intended
the entrance to be on the east side of the college and
to relate to the Albert Hall, but with the Grimshaw
design the entrance moves to the north. The proposed
new building would also block the views of the Albert
Hall, which formed a large part of the rationale behind
the original design. The Society finds that the proposed
scheme has no regard for the listed structure, and destroys
the sensitive balance Cadbury-Brown clearly intended
in the buildings' juxtaposition. The scheme also shows
no respect for the setting of the college and its considered
relationship to the Albert Hall and Albert Hall Mansions
discussed earlier. Clearly, this site is the only choice
open to the Royal College of Art in terms of increasing
their space provision, and unfortunately the sole option
for them is to build upwards. Yet it is quite remarkable
that a school of art and design of such repute and international
standing has such a lack of regard for its own outstanding
buildings.
Westminster has been accused once
already of being short-sighted and they seem set to
put the record straight. Although the Society has viewed
the scheme, it has not yet gone to planning. It was
due to go by the end of July, and although we saw the
scheme recently we may not have seen the final submission.
Westminster has been involved in informal discussions
on the proposals over the past year and the scheme had
reached a virtually final stage before we were invited
to view it. While the need for space at the college
is pressing, surely it cannot justify the destruction
of the integrity of these marvellous purpose-built art
college buildings, as well as their relationship to
the Albert Hall and Albert Hall Mansions by altering
so significantly the spatial relationship they have
to each other. It seems like a case of déjà-vu,
and while the Society does want the building to function
successfully and for the purpose for which it was intended,
it cannot endorse these current proposals.
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