Park Bench London

News and views about London's parks and gardens.
The views expressed here are not necessarily those of the London Parks and Gardens Trust.
To contribute your first article, please email blogger at londongardenstrust.org.
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Thursday, August 14, 2008

The Museum of Garden History starts its dramatic reconstruction

The front enrtance of the Garden MuseumOn Friday 31st July the Museum of Garden history closed its doors to the public and opened them for architects, contractors and designers to begin the construction of a new gallery.

The museum will be closed for three months for the construction of better spaces for visitors to enjoy the building and collection. On 18th November, the museum will re-open as The Garden Museum, a new space to explore and celebrate British gardening and gardens through the collection, temporary exhibitions, events, symposia and garden.

The new interior of the Museum, designed by Dow Jones Architects, will include a gallery for temporary exhibitions and a new space for education. The Director, Christopher Woodward, explained the outreach of the project::

"We're shut for three months, during which time we're going to build new galleries inside this historic church, begun in 1384. It's a beautiful, bright space but it doesn't have spaces in which we can display works on paper, work with schools - or mount exhibitions. Last year we held a competition, which was won by Dow Jones, who have just been short-listed as RIBA Architect of the Year. Their design will be prefabricated in Switzerland and be delivered in three huge trucks. It's freestanding, and won't touch the old stone walls. It's a ground-breaking use of new building technology. In effect, we're fitting a modern museum inside an historic church, and it's amazing that we can do that in three months. At the same time we're building Britain's first venue dedicated to a programme of exhibitions about gardens and garden design."

The garden of the Garden MuseumThe new gallery will open with the first-ever retrospective of Beth Chatto, one of the most influential living gardeners in Britain. The exhibition will examine the subtlety of her approach to design and explore important influences to her particular kind of gardening.

The new spaces on the Garden Museum will allow old and new treasures from the permanent collection to be displayed for the first time.

During the closure period the garden will remain open daily from 9.30 to 5.30. The Garden Café will open Monday to Friday from 10.30 to 4.45.

For further information, please see  www.museumgardenhistory.org

Sunday, August 3, 2008

New Lease of Life for Dollis Hill House

Hazelle Jackson writes:

In North London the Heritage Lottery Fund (HLF) has given a Stage 1 pass award for a grant of £1.2million for the important London landmark, Dollis Hill House in the London Borough of Brent, to help save it from demolition and return the Regency manor to the community.

Dollis Hill House
Dollis Hill House

Dollis Hill House was originally built in 1825 on top of a hill in what is now Gladstone Park. It was Prime Minister William Gladstone's former residence and Mark Twain's favoured retreat in the 19th century. The Regency villa, still largely intact, is surrounded by what the famous American writer Mark Twain described as "noble trees" with panoramic vistas over London.

Enjoying stunning and uninterrupted views as far as St Paul's Cathedral and Wembley Stadium, the mansion was an important part of community life between the wars. Until 1974 it was used as a tea room and restaurant and then as a catering college. Sadly, it has lain empty and disused since closure in 1989, and has even been the victim of several arson attacks in recent years.

The HLF funds will enable Training for Life, the award-winning social enterprise charity, to work closely with the Dollis Hill House Trust and Brent Council to develop plans to save the building and return it to its former glory.

The Grade II listed house can now look forward to being faithfully restored and extended, removed from the English Heritage 'at risk' register, and returned to its former use as a tearoom and restaurant.

'Absolutely Thrilled'

Gill Close, Chair of the Dollis Hill House Trust, said: "After local people have worked for almost 20 years to save Dollis Hill House, we are absolutely thrilled that our partnership with Training For Life is finally going to bring the house back to being the vibrant heart of Gladstone Park and the local community for all to enjoy."

Commenting on the award Cllr Paul Lorber, Leader of Brent Council said: "The council is delighted on behalf of Training for Life that their bid has found favour with the Heritage Lottery Fund. This brings them a step closer to restoring Dollis Hill House for local people."

The restoration of Dollis Hill House will see this area of London fully regenerated following a recent £722,000 HLF grant for the restoration of Gladstone Park in 2002. The Dollis Hill House Trust was set up by members of the local community to restore the house for the benefit of the community.

For further info see the websites

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Greenwich Olympic 'Circus'

Chris Sumner writes:

Also encouraging is the Mayor's intention to review the 2012 Olympics proposals, the prospective costs of which are continually mounting. One of the first things that he and his advisers may like to review is the preposterous proposal to use Greenwich Park as the venue for the equestrian events.

Greenwich Park is small by Royal Parks standards, and acts much more than any of the other Royal Parks as a recreation ground for local people as well as being a draw for tourists and the setting for an unequalled assemblage of historic buildings.

It is clear that the only reason for the enthusiasm of the London Organising Committee of the Olympic Games for using Greenwich Park is that the palaces built by Inigo Jones, Wren, Hawksmoor, et al. would provide great photo opportunities. So, while the horses are trampling the archaeology and the crowds and the Portaloos and the international television crew vans are compacting the tree roots, the world can be treated to a few hours of Palladian and Baroque backdrop, no doubt accompanied by Vivaldi, or will it be Purcell for local colour? How pathetic! Where are the local children and families and dogs and joggers going to play and run and picnic for the fifteen months that much of the park will be out of commission? Has LOCOG seen how busy the park gets, especially at weekends?

The Queen's House and Greenwich Palace
The Queen's House and Greenwich Palace: 
the backdrop to the Olympic equestrian events
 

Is it any consolation that the present government will no longer be the hosts by 2012? Not really, given the apparent alternative, but the likelihood of the current lot's being out on their ear sooner or later may encourage the agencies tasked with advising the government to take a longer-term view, and to express their reservations rather less equivocally than to date.

Le Notre failed to grasp the nature of Greenwich Park, but he had the excuse of never having visited it and seen its steep asymmetry. He knew nothing about its unstable geology, and would not have cared about the archaeology or the concerns of the local people. LOCOG has no such excuses, and must be shown that Greenwich Park is much too important to be sacrificed for the Olympic five-ring circus.

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Tall Tales from London Town

Chris Sumner writes:

A recent trip to Covent Garden to see Simone Boccanegra led me to wonder whether there were parallels between the struggle for power between the Patricians and Plebeians of mediaeval Italy and those of modern London, and whether Harrison Birtwhistle might do for Boris and Ken what Verdi did for the sparring Doges of Genoa.

Any parallels of irregular love lives, ruthless egos and (character) assassination of the protagonists are perhaps better not explored, but high buildings were an issue in San Gimignano, where each family vied to build higher than its neighbour, and the civic life and the traffic of Siena were and still are disrupted by the annual Paglio horse race.

London has its high buildings threats and its prospective Olympic equestrian events, so some things remain evergreen. Boris Johnson seems less ready than his predecessor to subscribe to the myth that every attractive park and river vista in London would be enhanced by a disproportionately tall new building, and the Richmond Park Conservatives' newsletter carries the encouraging headline BORIS BACKS THE VIEW..

"The iconic keyhole view of St Paul's Cathedral from King Henry's Mound in Richmond Park has been reprieved and will be protected... an assurance from Boris Johnson... that not only would he reverse the assaults made by Ken Livingstone but he would also vigorously ensure that there will be no infringements of the original viewing corridor".

Well, we shall see, but it sounds like good news, as does the new Mayor's announced intention to spend £6m on London's parks.

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