We went on a short trip to Château Bauduc to see its vineyards in the hills outside Creon:-





We went on a short trip to Château Bauduc to see its vineyards in the hills outside Creon:-





I didn’t know quite what to expect of St. Macaire where my brother spent part of the year. It turns out to be a small medieval town, well preserved, once a port on the Garonne, but the river moved leaving the town marooned in fields:-





An exemplary article by Tanya Harrod on the changing boundaries between contemporary fine art and what used to be described, sometimes patronisingly, as craft:-
https://www.apollo-magazine.com/craft-textiles-modern-art-history/
Last week, I went to see the new building at the LSE by Grafton Architects – another pretty impressive big project, £145 million the quoted cost, but worth it for what it does in terms of giving LSE a public face on Lincoln’s Inn Fields and giving the university more of a presence on its complex site: an interesting building, half quasi-concrete, neo-brutalist, but with a very strong humane feel, with lots of space for working and beautiful gardens on the rooftop. For some reason, my picture of the roof terraces didn’t make it onto the blog:-

Nor did my picture up into the heart of the building:-

Nor my picture of the staircase:-

For my more considered views, see the blog below:-
https://www.architectureclub.co.uk/events/behind-the-scenes-the-marshall-building
It will be well known to readers of my blog that I am not a big fan of Tower Hamlets and its planning policies, not least for the decision of its planning committee to grant permission for redevelopment of the Whitechapel Bell Foundry, the most priceless historical asset which is now being allowed to decay unused (https://thecritic.co.uk/issues/february-2023/the-beastly-east/).
But, I cannot disguise that I am very impressed by the redevelopment of the old London Hospital building which was in a terrible state of decay into the new Tower Hamlets Town Hall. It has been done by AHMM and is a clever mix of the new and the old – restoring the main façade, keeping the porte-cochère, but adding what is essentially all new build at the back, but done with character and including a Council Chamber where we can all go and listen to debates.
It opened apparently without fanfare on Monday and already looks incredibly well used, with loads of places to park your bike and a good sense of relationship to the street, with a park being planned behind.
Now, Mayor Rahman and his planning committee need to address what is to happen to the Bell Foundry. Compulsory purchase ? They have demonstrated that they are capable of imaginative redevelopment. Please can they apply these skills to the development of the Bell Foundry as a Centre for Craft Skills, combining new and old technology ?





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