Browse Exhibits (2 total)

Temples of Power: Designing Bankside and Battersea Power Stations

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Though their outward appearances have been preserved, Giles Gilbert Scott's temples to industry have undergone a fascintating evolution in the 21st century. Bankside Power Station is now known as the Tate Modern museum, which is considered a testament to modern adaptive reuse, while Battersea Power Station is undergoing commercial redevelopment in collaboration with Frank Gehry and Foster + Partners. Despite their differing histories, the two power stations remain today – as they did when they were originally built – as symbols of the industrial era of London. Examining the design intentions and evolutions of Bankside and Battersea, in conjunction with an analysis of the architectural concept of monumentality, allows the development a working definition of what it means to be a monument in the 21st century, and how the fluidity of monumentality creates a dynamic relationship between the structures and the city of London itself.

 

A Tale of Two Power Stations: The History and Redevelopment of Bankside and Battersea

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In the heart of London resides two of the city’s most iconic and unusual landmarks: Power Station (active 1952-81) and Battersea Power Station (active 1933-1983). These immense, masterful structures, designed by the eminent church architect Sir Giles Gilbert Scott (1880-1960), stand today as symbols of a bygone industrial era in the city of London. Each building has undergone a unique transformation in the 20th century: Bankside Power Station is now known as the Tate Modern museum and is considered a testament to modern adaptive reuse, while Battersea Power Station has proved to be more difficult to redevelop, now undergoing commercial redevelopment. Due to differences in location, industrial function, and the nature of their redevelopment schemes, Bankside and Battersea Power Stations have had varying levels of success in their 21st century rebirths as vehicles of urban redevelopment. An examination of their design, disuse, and their subsequent redevelopment – can be used as a lens through which to understand the history of industrial London, as well as London’s development into a 21st century city.