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Sully Hospital, Sully, Vale of Glamorgan,
Wales by W A Pite, Son, and Fairweather, 1936, Listed
Grade II
'An outstanding example of inter-war
architecture, which has survived almost unaltered'.
This opening quotation from Pevsner's The Buildings
of Wales, Glamorgan, astutely describes one of the last
great Modernist landmarks left in Wales. Indeed, it
is the finest Modernist sanitorium to which Britain
can lay claim. [Click for images of the front
elevation, southwards
and for a site
plan]. The sanitorium is a building type that reflects
the Modern Movement par excellence and highlights the
era's strong regard for the health benefits of light
and air and their capacity to cure. Sully sits amongst
a host of contemporaneous examples, whether by Aalto
at Paimio, Bijvoet and Duiker at Sonnenstraal or Gardella
in Northern Italy.
Built between the years of 1932-36
by William Pite, Son and Fairweather,
following their success in an open competition in 1931
to design the building, Sully Hospital was in later
years used as a psychiatric hospital, and was vacated
a year or so ago. It was constructed specifically to
house tuberculosis sufferers, whose cure required the
maximum of light and air; hence the choice of the site
at Sully, which is close to the sea, located on the
clifftops overlooking the Bristol Channel. Its concrete
frame, pioneered during this period, allowed for large
expanses of glazing, hitherto structurally impossible,
which opened to let in the sea breezes. Sully's south
facing wards constitute the most impressive part of
the design, and form two Vs towards the sea; their oblique
facades are glazed to allow in sunlight and air for
the patients. Importantly, the V-shaped plan cleverly
shelters the outdoor clifftop grounds, allowing patients
to take fresh air without the chill of the wind. The
expansive use of glazing is carried through into the
cylindrical stair towers, typical of this period, which
are lit by full-height windows.
The hospital is listed at Grade II,
yet this does little to reassure its admirers that the
building is safe from meddling hands. The saga at Brynmawr
is only too recent. The Brynmawr rubber factory, which
was one of the first post-war buildings to be listed
in Britain, met its beleaguered fate last year after
a stay of execution in 1995. Considered an architectural
masterpiece, its Grade II* status was finally not enough
to save it from demolition. In an effort to stop history
repeating itself, the residents of Wales seem determined
to fight harder for one of their country's few remaining
gems. Wales is not blessed with a wealth of great architectural
icons, so people in Wales are keen to highlight the
plight of this case.
Empty at the moment, and yet to find
a new use, the Home Office is now looking to house 750
asylum seekers within the hospital until 2003. Opposition
to the plans is rife, intensified by the secretive handling
of this case by the Home Office, which has never mentioned
its listed status. Wales received a great deal of criticism
over the demolition of Brynmawr, being attacked for
its lack of regard for its cultural heritage, as well
as for a lack of imagination. This time the tables have
turned: people in Wales are desperately campaigning
to save an important building, yet Whitehall seems set
to contravene. The major worry among those in Wales
is that a change of use would mean that the building
would be altered, and that using the centre for asylum
seekers could lead to its integrity being compromised.
They fear that, if the Home Office succeeds, instead
of there being a continuing search for an appropriate
use for the building, the changes and condition of the
building could lead to no one taking the hospital on
afterwards, and thus lead to its demolition.
Campaigners are concerned that changes
may happen 'behind their backs', or worse, that this
case is a foregone conclusion, given that the Home Office
are the propagators. It is not uncommon for the views
of amenity groups like ourselves to be passed over or
'forgotten'. In special circumstances, the government
seem able to over-rule on listed cases, which perhaps
is unsurprising given that the local and county councils
were unaware, until recently, that the building was
even listed. Surprise has been expressed that the hospital's
plight is little-known outside Wales. The only press
the case has received thus far is a short mention in
Building Design last year, in an article confirming
that the bulldozing of Brynmawr had begun. Perhaps this
report will help spread the vital word and will be recognised
as an effort to retain this Welsh landmark in its glory,
and preserve the heritage of Wales.
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