Daquise

We went to Daquise for lunch, half way through our visit to the wonderful Great Mughals exhibition at the V&A.  It is one of those places that one assumes will always be there because it feels as if it has always been there, at least since 1947 when it was opened by Mr. Dakowski and his wife Louise.  It has been poshed up a bit since I used to go there for lunch in the 1980s, but my veal meatballs looked unexpectedly familiar.

Now, of course, it’s at risk of redevelopment.  The Rogers Stirk Harbour scheme which has been rumbling through planning approval forever is going ahead, so all that remains of the attractively seedy underground station and its surroundings, the remainder bookshop and no doubt Daquise, will be eradicated.

But it should really have a preservation order as a monument to the role of the Poles in post-war British culture when retired Polish generals could be spotted in Daquise playing chess.

https://www.standard.co.uk/going-out/restaurants/restaurant-review-daquise-b1187019.html

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Joseph Rykwert (3)

I have been expecting there to be more obituaries of Joseph Rykwert, so was pleased to read the very well-informed one by Rowan Moore in yesterday’s Guardian which gives a very good sense of his widespread influence, as much through his personality as his writing:-

https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2024/nov/04/joseph-rykwert-obituary

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Czechoslovakia Embassy

I went to an exhibition in the Czech Embassy, so was able to see what was originally the administrative part of the building, now the Slovak Embassy, from their shared garden, both of them fine and well preserved examples of 1960s brutalism designed by three Czech architects, Jan Bočan, Jan Šrámek and Karel Štěpánský, all of it perfectly preserved:-

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Anglesey Coastal Path (2)

I got up early to catch the best of the day.  In fact, the dawn sun was still rising behind the mountains as I walked west towards the sea:-

There was mist over the river:-

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Anglesey Coastal Path (1)

It’s a while since I’ve walked the Anglesey Coastal Path east from Newborough to Plas Newydd which goes across fields and along ancient tracks always with a view of the mountains across the Menai Straits.

You get a glimpse of Caernarvon Castle in the distance:-

Tide provided a welcome cappuccino:-

You then go through a patch of old woodland:-

Down to the Straits:-

In the end, I doubled back to old St. Nidan’s and caught the bus back from Brynsiencyn:-

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Building Culture

I didn’t do a post last week after I went to hear a public conversation organised by Gagosian between Nicholas Serota and Julian Rose about Julian’s new book about museums, Building Culture: Sixteen Architects on How Museums are Shaping the Future of Art, Architecture and Public Space. I wanted to read the book. I have now done so (https://papress.com/products/building-culture). It’s very good, based on sixteen conversations/discussions (he calls them interviews but he contributes much more than just the questions) with sixteen major architects who have focused on the design of museums internationally. Because of the layout of the book, they seem to be mostly men, but that is because Denise Scott Brown, Kazuyo Sejima and Annabelle Selldorf all have surnames towards the end of the alphabet.

In the conversation, I came away particularly impressed by the lay-out of the 21st. Century Museum of Contemporary Art in Kanazawa and hadn’t realised that the original competition was for a museum and community facilities to be treated separately and it was SANAA who suggested putting them together in a way which manages to be both beautifully coherent structurally, but also complex in the way the galleries are arranged.

The interview with Denise Scott Brown makes clear how much of a pioneer she was – more than Bob – in thinking about spatial layouts and the movement of people through the building. She describes the Sainsbury Wing as ‘a pop building in the sense that it considers the populace’.

Cumulatively, it’s a profound meditation on how museums have, and are evolving. I found it particularly interesting in the light of the current competition for the West Wing of the British Museum, not least because there is a long interview with Shohei Shigematsu who works with Rem Koohaas overseeing his museum projects.

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The Lost Gardens of London

Last night we went to the opening of Todd Longstaffe-Gowan’s beautiful and unexpectedly moving exhibition of ‘The Lost Gardens of London’: so many gardens which, for obvious reasons, are unknown; most especially, the number of gardens and squares round Euston which have disappeared as a result of HS2, unlamented and apparently unprotested because it is a poor neighbourhood.

The exhibition has been beautifully designed by Jamie Fobert with strong colours (Papers and Paints) to provide the backdrop; and a wonderful deliberate mix of material – paintings, maps, photographs, even a photograph of the now happily forgotten mount at Marble Arch, one of the great follies of our time.

Highly recommended !

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Joseph Rykwert (2)

On Friday, I was thinking that I ought to write something about Joseph Rykwert. I have discovered from a notice in La Repubblica that he actually died on Friday, although there is no further information, other than the fact that he was 98.

He only just made it to the UK, as his brilliant autobiography, Remembering Places, describes, escaping out of Poland by way of Stockholm and Amsterdam. He was a remarkable person, who I got to know when he was still, but only just, a Professor in the Department of Art History and Theory at the University of Essex. In fact, I remember that I had to provide evidence of his intellectual credentials when he was appointed to a lectureship at Cambridge not long afterwards because it had come to the authorities’ notice that he had apparently never completed his training at the Architectural Association. He then moved to the University of Pennsylvania, but must have spent most of every year in London where he kept his library.

He was an impressively wide-ranging intellectual, as interested and involved in the practice of architecture as he was in its history and theory. He was important not just for his own writings, including On Adam’s House in Paradise: The Idea of the Primitive Hut in Architectural History (1972) and The First Moderns: The Architects of the Eighteenth Century (1980), but for his influence on other writers and architects, including David Chipperfield and Daniel Libeskind. In 2014, he was awarded the Gold Medal by the RIBA.

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Norton Folgate (5)

I booked myself on to the Architecture Foundation’s tour of Norton Folgate in order to see what has been done in a site which has been one of the great battlegrounds of British conservation history.

To recap (a bit).  The site is on the northern edge of the City and was originally occupied by a monastery, the Priory and Hospital of St. Mary Spital.  It then became a Liberty until absorbed by the Metropolitan Borough of Stepney in 1900.  In the late nineteenth century, much of the site was occupied by Nicholls & Clarke, a builders’ merchants, which sold the land to the City who encouraged British Land to redevelop it in the 1970s.  This development was fiercely resisted by a group which became the Spitalfields Trust, including John Betjeman, Mark Girouard and Dan Cruickshank.

More recently, there was another battle when British Land (again) acquired the site and planned to turn it into offices.  It was given planning permission by Boris Johnson as one of his last acts as Mayor.

The truth is that the development has been done with considerable care and sensitivity.  The masterplan was done by AHMM, but individual parts of the project were subcontracted to other practices including Stanton Williams and Morris & Company.  The Arts and Crafts building on Folgate Street has been renovated.  Some of the warehouses on Blossom Street have been retained.

It is too early to tell what it will feel like once the offices, shops and restaurants have been let.  At the moment, particularly on a Saturday morning, it is a touch lifeless, a bit like Blank Street Coffee, trying hard to belong to the neighbourhood, but not yet succeeding. 

Time will tell.  It’s certainly been done in a more sensitive way than much of the City.

This is Elder Street:-

This is the view west across Norton Folgate:-

And north towards the Bishopsgate goods yard (another battleground):-

This is Blossom Street:-

Maybe the most successful bit of the project is Blossom Yard:-

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