Some education buildings teach you things, and others need to be taught
a lesson. In Elephant and Castle, I went to work within the London Southbank
University. It’s a triangular campus cut through by side streets. Navigating
back to it from Lambeth in the south west, the university’s two central slabs
present a kind of ridge or raised horizon line. These two buildings are K2 and
the Keyworth Centre, and they mark the former polytechnic's inauguration as a
university. Both are high and thin and glass fronted. At first I saw these glass
fronts as typical images of transparency, literalising an openness of view if
not of access, essentially like a shop window (public buildings ‘must be the
visible shop window of an enlightened local authority’ said Hampshire county
architect in the 70s and 80s, Colin Stansfield Smith). But if so, as I came
closer and started to use the buildings, the constructed signs of life from within seemed more complex and multivalent than the simple 'colour and vibrancy' one might expect. Inside these two buildings you can see a high rise university of
walkways and staircases, as if reflecting a city which isn’t yours back to you
(changing the outside by working inside the mirror).
From the street, the more demonstrative is the Keyworth Centre (2003)
by BDP, commissioned for the new university’s launch. A full height, nine
storey atrium is fronted by a glass grid - the ideal form of Platonists such as
Mies van der Rohe, but here starred and made to float before the colours and
forms within. Yellow and blue awnings which strike colour into the facade's
glass grid recall an arcade or a Mediterranean back street, becoming part of
the overall image of an encased city within (they’re actually roller blinds for
the offices looking out into the atrium). Using the space every day, its
oddness seemed to deepen and I went to the archives to view the plans, wanting
to know what the beautiful wooden struts which shoot diagonally through the
atrium might actually do: these supports splay out in X patterns and, I
discovered, they take wind load from the facade and transfer it to the internal
structure. The wood's shininess indicates the pressurised mixture of wood, glue and lamination which it has been treated to. The facade's glass grid is held by a wooden lattice, so the struts
continue this wood engineering inwards. From either side of the atrium, paired
birch wood towers stack terraces with seminar rooms, connected by balconies and
corridors – at seven storeys they're tall for wooden structures. They suggest a
different version of BDP's 'beehive school' concept derived from the directly
contemporary Hampden Gurney glass-beehive primary school in Marylebone (2002). It’s at the thoughtful end of what became a ‘Scandinavian style’ of
timber cladding combined with random brickwork, colour and bits of metal, more
marked and deliberate as McGuirk previously worked with Ralph Erskine on the
Byker estate, which made these design themes famous.
Next door, the K2 building by Grimshaw (2007),
pushes the idea of building as pedagogy to an actual, remarkable point at which
the floor of your seminar room may be teaching you something about material
change. The Centre for Efficient and Renewable Energy in Buildings use the
fabric of K2 and its services as a data collector, testing ground and exemplar.
A walkway out onto the roof places you among windswept pipes and chiller
absorption cabinets, ducts and air handling units; suddenly a panorama of London
is apparent through the plant. A seminar room apparently hidden within this
clanking, whirring mess, might seem to be a control room of the technological
sublime, but its aforementioned glass floor shows an example of phase change
materials used to store and release thermal energy in the change from solid to
liquid and vice versa.
From the roof of K2 |
Back at street level, the building is a bridge around
the atrium where hundreds of tonnes of Pilkington glass is held in place by
steel blades so that you can see into and through the building, a view darkened
by multiple tinted and laminated panes. Glass sided walkways connect to a white
spiral staircase, sculptural and exposed. Education, the building suggests, is not
just open but so open that you can see straight through, albeit with darkened
vision. Opposite this ridge of modern buildings is an older structure built for
the then polytechnic. This is the London Road Building of 1975, designed by
John Weller under Peter Jones, GLC education architect. Its solution to the
need for density is a red tiled block with slanted, aluminium framed windows –
stylistic elements drawn directly from James Stirling's 'red trilogy' of
university buildings completed in the sixties. Is the building an imitation, or
an attempt to turn Stirling’s new break into an applicable style? The search
for models (to develop or to copy) occurs across schools and colleges, driven
by waves of population growth or investment (or not) in education – to take one
example analogous to the Stirling effect, Alison and Peter Smithson only
designed one school but it spawned ‘the Hunstanton style’ of schools across the
UK.
London Road’s towers which flank the entrance doors and the long thin
strips of windows (which light an internal corridor) point in particular to
Stirling's Florey building in Oxford (1968). The combined materials of
Stirling's red buildings are rarely copied so exactly, perhaps because the
problems with glazing and frames which beset them were widely publicised,
particularly with the Florey building. This skin, however, simply wraps around
a concrete structure which combines three quads (inaccessible and containing
plant as if to note that a quad is, I don't know, a machine for learning in), lecture theatres
and an internal street which connects London Road to Keyworth Street. Seen from
above, there is no axonometric integration of forms as occurs with Stirling's
original red buildings, you simply see over the red facade and onto the flat
roof and quads, just as the GLC's architectural plans show a stepped red line
supporting spacer bars, the red line being the building's basic idea - as if a
style were a line, zigzagging away from one building to briefly wrap around
another, gathering speed until it dissipates into increasingly arcane
references. In fact such a line could have come straight down Walworth Road, as
Stirling and Gowan's Brunswick Park school assembly hall in Camberwell is
contemporary with the Leicester engineering building.
These three buildings respond in form to the chaos of density inherited
from the form of a central London polytechnic college where every building
combines lecture theatres with workshops, seminar rooms and labs, quite unlike
the master planned or city wide campus. Working within while also researching
these three buildings, I found how each – through structure, the building
fabric or imitation – could itself be an education.
A rooftop education in K2 |
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