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Demolishing Whitehall - Leslie Martin, Harold Wilson and the Architecture of White Heat (Paperback)
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Demolishing Whitehall - Leslie Martin, Harold Wilson and the Architecture of White Heat (Paperback)
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This book is about a lost world, albeit one less than 50 years old.
It is the story of a grand plan to demolish most of Whitehall,
London's historic government district, and replace it with a
ziggurat-section megastructure built in concrete. In 1965 the
architect Leslie Martin submitted a proposal to Charles Pannell,
Minister of Public Building and Works in Harold Wilson's Labour
government, for the wholesale reconstruction of London's
'Government Centre'. Still reeling from war damage, its eighteenth-
and nineteenth-century palaces stood as the patched-up headquarters
of an imperial bureaucracy which had once dominated the globe.
Martin's plan - by no means modest in conception, scope or scale -
proposed their replacement with a complex that would span the roads
into Parliament Square, reframing the Houses of Parliament and
Westminster Abbey. The project was not executed in the manner
envisaged by Martin and his associates, although a surprising
number of its proposals were implemented. But the un-built
architecture is examined here for its insights into a distinctive
moment in British history, when a purposeful technological future
seemed not just possible but imminent, apparently sweeping away an
anachronistic Edwardian establishment to be replaced with a new
meritocracy forged in the 'white heat of technology'. The Whitehall
plan had implications well beyond its specific site. It was
imagined by its architects as a scientific investigation into ideal
building forms for the future, an important development in their
project to unify science and art. For the political actors, it
represented a tussle between government departments, between those
who believed that Britain needed to discard much of its Victorian
and Edwardian decoration in the name of 'professionalization' and
those who sought to preserve its ornate finery. Demolishing
Whitehall investigates these tensions between ideas of technology
and history, science and art, socialism and el
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