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No 1 Poultry

Coordinates:51°30′48″N0°05′27″W / 51.51333°N 0.09083°W /51.51333; -0.09083
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Office building in the City of London

No 1 Poultry, pictured from Mansion House Street

No 1 Poultry[a] is a building in theCity of London, allocated to office and commercial use. It occupies the apex where the eastern ends ofPoultry andQueen Victoria Street meet atMansion House Street, the western approach toBank junction.

The design, byJames Stirling, was constructed after the architect's death. It replaced theMappin & Webb building, aneogothic, conical-turreted,grade II listed retail building, owned by developerRudolph Palumbo and subsequently by his son, developerPeter Palumbo. Another option was a modernist minor skyscraper designed byLudwig Mies van der Rohe in the manner of theSeagram Building in New York City – but dropped having failed in an influential architectural and planning show-down in the 1970s. The tall but less towering design, in apostmodernist style with an outer shell of even bands of rose-pink and muted yellow stone, prevailed. The point of the apex, as before, has a clock face but higher, as above a large pointed apex set of 30 window panes.

In 2016, the landowner proposed exterior alteration. Building users, experts and neighbours persuaded the experts at the designated UK body to protect and recognise the building and did so in the notablegrade II* listed building category, making it, within England, the youngest at the time.[1]

Overview

[edit]
Coq d'Argent restaurant on the roof of No 1 Poultry
Night-time view, from street facing the apex of the building, Cornhill
Interior atrium windows

The present building was completed in 1997, five years after architect Stirling's death and three years after construction began. It is apostmodern structure, with use of bold, perhaps unsubtle, forms and colours in a compact assembly. It is clad in pink and yellow limestone in even stripes (and apex arch stones, that isvoussoirs) whilst the courtyard, an atrium, displays some of Stirling's characteristic acidulous colour play.

Like many notable postmodern buildings, the imagery is rich in references. For example, from the sharp apex of the site akeyhole-shaped opening leads to a little-seenScala Regia with a ramped floor, gold-leafed terminus andancient Egyptian aura takes visitors into the heart of the building. Intended as site owner Palumbo's private entrance, this space is now little used: Palumbo sold the development before its completion. The turret above is sometimes likened to a submarineconning tower while the glazed thus two-sided clock is in concept and detail that of theArt Deco eraPalazzo delle Poste, Naples.

Completed nearly two decades after the first designs were published, the building saw a range of muted and divided views from leading critics as the heyday of postmodernism was over. Amongst the readers ofTime Out magazine, it was voted fifth-worst in London.

Following application generally supported by neighbours, users and experts, the building was protected and recognised by law as Grade II*-listed on 29 November 2016.[b] The chief proponent was theTwentieth Century Society to block a planned redesign of the structure; thus the main opponent was the landowner.[2][3][4]

Construction

[edit]
TheMappin & Webb building byJohn Belcher in the centre of a picture takenc. 1902
The Mappin & Webb building in 1993, which was demolished to make way for No 1 Poultry

As to the apex facingMansion House, aConservation Area, to rebuild drew much opposition particularly as standing there, in repairable condition, was a 19th-centuryneo-Gothiclisted building occupied by crown jewellersMappin and Webb. It had been designed byJohn Belcher in 1870.

An office building and public plaza byMies van der Rohe was pencilled for the site in 1969, to beMansion House Square. The successful counter-argument was retold byPrince Charles in his 1984 "carbuncle" speech toRIBA, viewing such a plan as "yet another giant glass stump, better suited to downtown Chicago than the City of London" and the plans were eventually scrapped.[5]

A majorarchaeological dig was undertaken by theMuseum of London Archaeology Service, directed by Peter Rowsome. This excavation made significant discoveries, including a wooden drain along the mainRoman road. Usingdendrochronology, this was dated to 47CE, proving RomanLondinium had developed in this part of the city by that date.

Construction was completed in 1997. The building took in other smaller buildings to the east.

Use

[edit]

No 1 Poultry comprises a mixed space of retail and offices.

A restaurant occupies the rooftop, and has a terrace and formal garden with far-reaching City views for drinkers and diners. It featured in theopening ceremony of the2012 Olympic Games in the segment 'Happy and Glorious' which sawDaniel Craig (asJames Bond) escort QueenElizabeth II to theOlympic Stadium by helicopter.

The terrace, below which is a fall of around 80 feet, has drawn notoriety in the City for having seen six cases of suicide by jumping off it: in 2007, 2009, twice in 2012,[6] in 2015, and in 2016.[7]

Owners

[edit]

For four years the building was owned by aHeinrich Feldman company – selling it toPerella Weinberg Partners for £110 million, a 4.8% gain, in 2014.[8] It sold again in 2018 to Hana Alternative Asset Management for £185m.[9]

References, footnotes and sources

[edit]

References

  1. ^Hopkirk, Elizabeth."Second time lucky as Stirling's No 1 Poultry is listed".bdonline. Retrieved4 December 2016.
  2. ^Braidwood, Ella (December 2016)."No 1 Poultry's owners hit back at listing as revamp work stalls".Architects' Journal. Retrieved4 December 2016.
  3. ^Marrs, Colin (30 November 2016)."James Stirling's No 1 Poultry listed".Architects' Journal. Retrieved4 December 2016.
  4. ^"№ 1 Poultry listed Grade II* after C20 challenge".Twentieth Century Society. Retrieved4 December 2016.
  5. ^Self, Jack (11 February 2017)."Mies's Mansion House Square: the best building London never had?".The Guardian. Retrieved30 June 2018.
  6. ^Razaq, Rashid; Parsons, Rob (5 September 2012)."Woman plunges to her death from top restaurant that has become suicide spot for City workers".Evening Standard. Retrieved14 October 2012.
  7. ^Sleigh, Sophia; Davenport, Justin (18 January 2016)."Coq d'Argent: Sixth death at City restaurant as man plunges 80ft from rooftop terrace".Evening Standard. Retrieved19 January 2016.
  8. ^Hipwell, Deirdre (14 March 2014)."Colourful No 1 Poultry to change hands for £110m".The Times. Retrieved12 November 2015.
  9. ^"Hana completes £185m acquisition of One Poultry". 14 December 2018.

Footnotes

  1. ^Spoken asnumber one Poultry
  2. ^By the statutory holder of this function,Historic England

Sources

External links

[edit]
Authority control databasesEdit this at Wikidata

51°30′48″N0°05′27″W / 51.51333°N 0.09083°W /51.51333; -0.09083

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