Travelodge (2)

They have been building a new Travelodge nearly next door to us all through lockdown, even in spite of reading that the company itself is in administration. They have just taken the scaffolding down and to our amazement, it is a perfectly respectable building, much superior to Topps Tiles which it replaced, brick clad, maintaining the street frontage and showing how it is possible to maintain the character of the existing surroundings, helped by the fact that Spitalfields Trust gave advice on the detailing. I cynically thought that the so-called community consultation was mere window dressing to get it through planning, but they do seem to have paid attention to what was requested:-

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The Allotment Kitchen (1)

I am hesitant about recommending The Allotment Kitchen, the new café at Stepney Farm, only because it is already so busy on Saturday mornings that it is hard to join the queue for their biscuits, cakes and buns. But having spent an infinitely leisurely hour eating breakfast out of a cardboard box, I cannot think of anywhere nicer:-

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The Blackbird (2)

We have been following the progress of the blackbird who has built her nest in the medlar tree right outside our dining room window. The night before last, her babies had been born and she was plumping herself up to protect them:-

This morning, there was one of the baby blackbirds waiting to be fed:-

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Charleston

We had a picnic lunch at Charleston. It’s not open and will not be for the rest of the year owing to the very small number of visitors who would be able to go round the house according to the rules of social distancing. So it is all shut, reverting to the status of a nearly private house. We were able to see the garden which was more lush than I have ever seen it, much more colourful than it is in mid-May when the Festival is normally, and no-one about, only the memory of those photographs of members of the Bloomsbury group lined up – Keynes in the intervals of writing The Economic Consequences of Peace, Roger Fry who apparently designed the garden, and Vanessa Bell who wrote of painting ‘apples, hollyhocks, plums, zinnias, dahlias’. There are still the lushest hollyhocks:-

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Lambeth Palace Library

The third item on the agenda today was a trip to see the new Lambeth Palace Library which won’t actually open till sometime next year, but is already impressively nearly finished – such a good idea to allow plenty of time for fitting out and not have to rush the finishing. I had heard Clare Wright of Wright & Wright talk about the project as part of the London Festival of Architecture. Everything about it is carefully considered, although it is hard to assess now from the street, because so much of its character and quality is the way it engages with the Lambeth Palace Garden, again with planting by Dan Pearson. I am not to post any photographs, but hope that I can of the magnificent exterior brickwork, which is already in the public domain:-

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The Garden Museum

You can have a picnic lunch at the Garden Museum, sandwiches made up by the café and consumed either outside or in the courtyard with its garden designed by Dan Pearson. What could be more therapeutic ?

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Derek Jarman

We went to see the Derek Jarman exhibition today, which has been open since Saturday. It’s an amazing achievement to have got it designed and built during lockdown, open on the first day it could, and slightly spooky to be able to walk across the shingle into a replica of Prospect Cottage. It’s been designed by Jeremy Herbert – beautifully:-

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The Blind Beggar and his dog

On the way back we stopped to admire The Blind Beggar and his Dog, which we looked at recently, but hadn’t realised is an early Frink, commissioned by Bethnal Green Borough Council in 1957, originally placed on the Roman Road, and moved to its current location in 1964, which makes it hard to see, but has probably led to it surviving intact without vandalism:-

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Walthamstow Wetlands

I was taken on a trip to see Walthamstow Town Hall, that fine example of 1930s Scandinavian classicism; but it turned out to be in restauro. More interesting was seeing the expanse of the local reservoir, with swifts diving:-

And its two bits of Victorian industrial architecture: the Coppermill which was turned into a pumping station in 1859 with the addition of its Italianate tower in 1864:-

And the Ferry Lane Pumping Station of 1894:-

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