Nuffield College

I accidentally took a wrong turn from Oxford station and found myself in Bulwarks Lane, a surprisingly old alleyway which apparently used to be called Bullocks Lane after someone in the sixteenth century called Bullock who dumped his rubbish there.  It gives an unexpectedly good view of Austen Harrison’s Nuffield College, which we slightly sneered at when I was a child, but looks pretty good for the 1950s:-

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The Queen’s College

The Queen’s College must be one of the most beautiful buildings anywhere on the bend of Oxford’s High Street, serenely classical.

But the process of its design is curiously opaque.  Hawksmoor made lots of drawings for it while he was working on Blenheim, but they were too ambitious.  Construction of the front quadrangle was done by William Townesend, the head of a family of masons responsible for many of the buildings in Oxford at the time, but it is assumed that his work was either overseen or the original plans were drawn up by George Clarke, a ubiquitous and knowledgeable (and very worldly) Oxford don, who gave his collection of architectural drawings to Worcester:-

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Radcliffe Quad

Reading Eleanora Pistis’s excellent new book, Architecture of Knowledge: Hawksmoor and Oxford, has made me look at early eighteenth-century Oxford with new interest.  One of the things that would never have crossed my mind is that the second quadrangle at University College was built from 1716-1719 out of a legacy from John Radcliffe who must be one of Oxford’s greatest benefactors – the Radcliffe Camera, the Radcliffe Observatory, the Radcliffe Infirmary – and this, which he insisted should be ‘answerable to the front already built’.

Here it is:-

Here he is, as sculpted by Francis Bird in 1719:-

https://www.brepols.net/products/IS-9781905375974-1

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Smithfield Market (2)

The news that the market traders in Smithfield have finally been successfully bought off opens up the question:- What happens now to the historic market building ? What will the city do in the area ?  Does its concept of Culture Mile remain in any way valid or has it been diverted to the redevelopment of the Barbican ?

As appears to be usual with planning in the city, the process is somewhat opaque, but some time ago Studio Egret West won a competition (see below) to come up with proposals, following an earlier scheme by Terry Farrell.

This is a reminder to the city authorities that the RIBA Drawings Collection is looking for a home.  Could it be incorporated into future plans for the building ?

This is a great opportunity, as well as a historic loss.

https://wholesalemarkets.co.uk/studio-egret-west/

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Enshittification

For those of you who are having difficulty accessing my photographs, I have been tipped off that this may be a result of what has been described – graphically if inelegantly – as ‘enshittification’, a process whereby websites start out all nice and simple, but are gradually corroded for commercial purposes, or at any rate become more difficult to use: a process which is a metaphor for life itself where we thought that the web would be our servant, but has now become our master:-

https://www.theguardian.com/science/2024/nov/26/enshittification-macquarie-dictionary-word-of-the-year-explained

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Making

Now that I’m back from Ireland, I have been watching a film which Joseph Walsh commissioned about Stone Vessel, which tells one a huge amount about the craft of making – church bells as well as building:-

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The Glucksman

The Glucksman was closed in between exhibitions, but I was still able to appreciate the beauty of its building, isolated in the parkland of University College, Cork, as if lost in the trees: the grandest form of tree house:-

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Munster Technological University

I arrived in the central courtyard on a crisp November morning.  It’s a remarkably successful set of buildings, so coherent, all in brick, by de Blacam & Meagher.  Finished in 2004:-

This is the library building, a bit earlier, but also exceptionally impressive:-

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The Mysteries of the Blog

I apologise to those readers who have not received images with my posts.  This is bad news.  WordPress, the platform on which the blog is published, must in some way have made changes to the way posts are transmitted because my readership has understandably plummeted. 

But unfortunately I don’t know how to rectify it.  I will investigate.

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St. Fin Barre’s Cathedral

St. Fin Barre’s Cathedral is quite wonderful, so surprising, not enormous, but full of restrained power.  You approach along the river and there it is, at the side of a minor street, almost like a toy:-

The interior is wonderful too, so well preserved, full of rich detail, all of it designed by William Burges:-

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