Saturday 25 November 2023 – Bethnal Green, London.
One month until Christmas, wow, where has this year gone? I'm sure I've said it on numerous occasions in the past but the older I get the quicker the years go by. Sadly the same can't be said for working days and weeks, they drag interminably. It's now Christmas Eve eve, Eleanor is at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium watching Spurs beat Everton 2-1 and I'm home in the warmth drinking a large gin and tonic, listening to The Stooges and finalising this post. A win-win for both of us.
This was the fourth Brutal Day Out walk I've attended and it was the biggest yet, with 13 walkers, which made the group too big. Organising photographers is like herding cats and I liked it best when there was only half a dozen of us. It's cool that the original group still come as I like all of them (a rare thing), and there are always good folk in the extended group, but it does make it slow going.
These walks are a good opportunity to see parts of London that most would not normally visit; housing estates for instance; and these were the focus of the walk today. There are a lot of 1960/70 estates in east London. We ended up being invited inside two tower blocks and made our way into a third by following someone in. All three we visited had the most incredible staircases, these buildings may look a bit drab and square and concrete on the outside, but the interiors are quite beautiful, as beautiful as concrete and basic function can get anyway. The first block we entered we were invited by an elderly resident who saw us outside with our cameras and phones and said we had to come in and look at the stairs, and they were pretty cool.
We met outside Mile End tube station, it's a lovely clear day but very cold, and there is a biting wind, I'm glad I wrapped up warm. The light is a little harsh for architecture photography, or at least my type of architecture photography, but it's nice to be outside under a a clear sky, it feels like it's been a long time. Once the group had assembled we crossed the road and walked to our first destination, the Lakeview Estate, opposite Victoria Park. I was surprised to find it was so close to Mile End station; it's good to be reminded that walking is the best way to learn how a city hangs together.
None of the buildings we visited today were brutalist masterpieces, at least that was the case from the outside and the Lakeview Building typified that. These buildings see the birth of the age of modernism in building construction. Designed in 1958 by the pioneering modernist architect, Berthold Lubetkin, for the then Bethnal Green Council it is an early example of how simple design and construction can be made into something aesthetically pleasing. Sometimes you need to look past the 'bit ugly tower block' and look for the details. Lubetkin's work features a lot on this walk today.
I particularly liked the way the sun came though the open passages between the stairwell and the flats; I may have been moaning about the harsh sun earlier, but the way it caught the steam rising from a gas boiler vent was a highlight for me.
Our next stop was the nearby Cranbrook Estate, another Lubetkin design, though this was a much large estate than Lakeview, comprising of six low rise towers and a series of small blocks making up 529 homes. It opened in 1963.
After walking around taking photos of exteriors we were regrouping outside Modling House when one of the residents arrived home.
She asked what we were doing and once we told her we were interested in architecture she invited us into the building to look at the stairs, 'because they're lovely'. They were, though I'm not happy with the photos I managed to get of them.
13 photographers milling about in a small space does make it difficult. I was also conscious that this place is home for lots of people and just because we were welcomed in by one resident didn't make us welcome by all. We took up a lot of space in the lobby, which in itself was photo-worthy. I like the clean lines and uniformity of the lobby which are verging on 'Wes Anderson'-ish. Lovely.
The next two stops were quick, single towers, fenced off, similar in style and both designed by Denys Landon. The first is Trevelyan House.
The second is Keeling House; very similar in design to Trevelyn House, but with added scaffold.
Sivill House on Columbia Rd was my favourite building of the day, it wasn't overly interesting to look at from the side we arrived on, with just a 19 storey brick cliff face with windows, though the other side of the building with its curved stairwell exposed was much more interesting. Completed in 1962 it's another fine Lubetkin designed construction.
As with Modeling House earlier in the day we were invited inside to have a look at the stairs by one of the residents, though the stairwell is completely different; a 19 storey tightly wound circular staircase that would make anyone dizzy running down.
At the behest of the resident we took the lift to the 19th floor to take a look down the lift shaft and to take in the amazing view from the top. I would have liked to explore this building a bit more, it looks fun.
Our last stop was the least inspiring for me, or at least the exterior was. However, James Bryne had the maddest staircase I've ever seen. I tried to take a photo of it from below but it didn't work very well, there seemed to be loads of interconnecting short stair cases crisscrossing all over the show. It looked very confusing from underneath. I just took a photo of the entrance instead. It was way less mind boggling. The architects really were into curvy concrete stairs in the 50 and 60s, and I like that a lot.
From James Byrne house most of us went to a pub near Liverpool Street Station, I had a swift pint and then caught the tube back home. It was a good day out and I took an awful lot of photos!
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