|
27/02/2003
One step closer in fight to save Birmingham
Central Library?
The C20th Society requested last March
that the Department of Culture, Media and Sport spot-list
Birmingham Central Library, as redevelopment proposals
involved the buildings demolition.
Completed in 1973, the library is
an excellent building designed by leading local practice
John Madin Design Group in association with city architect
J A Maudsley. Built in reinforced concrete and with
an unusual inverted ziggurat profile which makes reference
to Boston City Hall and, more distantly, Le Corbusiers
La Tourette monastery one of the twentieth centurys
architectural masterpieces, it holds a powerful presence
alongside the art gallery and City Hall.
The Society believes that the quality
of this building should be recognised by listing and
that this well-planned civic masterpiece should be retained.
The building is barely thirty years old. It is astonishing
that rather than recognise the quality of this building,
Birmingham is instead planning to raze it. The Society
believes that this is an important post-war building,
designed by local architects rather than a London-based
practice, and forms an important part of the citys
cultural heritage. Although fashions of the 1970s have
been re-assessed and mined for information by new designers
several times over, buildings of this period are still
very little understood and if it is demolished now then
Birmingham will lose a great building before its importance
has been recognised.
For further
information please contact Claire Barrett on 020 7250
3857 or email at claire.barrett@c20society.org.uk
Eva Ling, local C20th Society representative, on 0121
449 1588
Note to Editors
Birmingham Central Library was designed in 1971 by local
practice John Madin Design Group in association with
city architect J A Maudsley and completed in 1973.
Back
|