Baskerville House
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Baskerville House | |
after the completion of the refurbishment. c. April 2007 |
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Building | |
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Type | |
Location | Centenary Square, Birmingham, England |
Coordinates | Coordinates: |
Construction | |
Completed | 1938 |
Design Team | |
Architect | T. Cecil Howitt |
Awards and Prizes | Grade II listed |
Baskerville House, previously called the Civic Centre, is a former civic building in Centenary Square, Birmingham, England.
Contents |
[edit] History
The site was originally occupied by the home of John Baskerville. He was buried nearby in the area which was known as Easy Hill. When the construction of a canal through the area was proposed, Baskerville's body was exhumed and found to be in good condition. It was placed on display to the public before being buried at Christ Church.[1] The site adjacent to the canal, on the site of Baskerville House, was purchased by the Birmingham Aluminium Company who constructed Baskerville Basin. Gibson's Basin was also constructed nearby to serve a rolling mill. The city council bought the land in 1919 for a new Civic Centre. Baskerville Basin was filled in but Gibson's Basin remained. However, in 1936, Winfields Ltd decided to relocate to Icknield Port after taking over Vivians Rolling Mills. They abandoned the remainder of Gibson's Basin to Birmingham City Council who filled it in for their Civic Centre plans.[2]
In 1926, the city council organised an open competition for the new layout of the Civic Centre, however, many of the designs were deemed 'Too Ambitious'. As a result, the city engineer was asked to work with the architects of the Hall of Memory, S.N. Cooke, to create a better design. T. Cecil Howitt of Nottingham was asked to design the first building, which was to become Baskerville House. This was approved in 1936 and construction began in 1938.[3] It became the only component to be built from the plan for the Civic Centre which would have covered all of Centenary Square and the Convention Centre, and included the Masonic Hall (1926-7 Rupert Savage) (vacated Central Television building) and Birmingham Municipal Bank (recently TSB) building (1931-3 also T. Cecil Howitt) on Broad Street. World War II halted construction of Baskerville House (hence the rear brick wall, intended to be temporary), and after the war the use of Roman Imperial imagery on public buildings went out of fashion. A 1941 model of the proposed Civic Centre, designed by William Haywood, Secretary of The Birmingham Civic Society, is displayed in the Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery.
[edit] Renovation
Formerly office for the Planning Department at Birmingham City Council,[4] the grade II listed building[5] remained vacant for several years after the City Council vacated the property in the spring of 1998. The initial refurbishment plan proposed conversion to a Radisson Edwardian Hotel.[6] A survey into whether it was possible to locate the Central Library was carried out, and the building was deemed to not be suitable as it would not be strong enough to hold all the books.[3]
The building was subsequently sold to Targetfollow who proposed to convert into offices. This was approved and it was completely gutted and extended two floors upwards to provide office space on seven floors, and a health club in the basement. Work started in August 2003 and was completed in early 2007 at an estimated cost of £30 million. There is 195,108 sq ft (18,126.1 m²) of office space[7] within the building with floorplates of 27,000 sq ft (2,500 m²). The two new floors are of steel and glass.[8] A lighting scheme was added to the exterior by Hoare Lea Lighting of the Hoare Lee group who were also commissioned for other aspects of the build.[9]
The building won the Commercial Development of the Year award at the Midlands Property Week awards in July 2007.[10] The building also won the Midlands and East Anglia regional award in the Refurbished/Recycled Workplace category at the British Council for Offices awards in October 2007.[5]
[edit] Industry and Genius
Baskerville House was built on the site of Easy Hill, the home of John Baskerville. A sculpture of the Baskerville typeface, Industry and Genius, in his honour stands outside the main entrance to Baskerville House in Centenary Square. It is by local artist David Patten and was created as part of the 'Percentage For Art' scheme in 1990. The letters spell out Virgil, the name of the Roman poet whose works were printed by Baskerville in 1757 in his typeface.[11] Made out of Portland stone and bronze, it is 150 centimetres (59 in) high, 100 centimetres (39 in) wide and 650 centimetres (256 in) long.[12]
[edit] Sources
- ^ Chris Upton (1993). A History of Birmingham. ISBN 0-85033-870-0.
- ^ The Birmingham Canal Navigations Society: BCN Branches and Bye ways by Ray Shill - 6.. Gibson's Arm
- ^ a b Original construction of Baskerville House
- ^ Adrian Salt; Henry Brown (1998). Planning Applications: The RMJM Guide. Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 063204117X.
- ^ a b Baskerville House one of top offices in the UK - Birmingham Post, October 5 2007 (Accessed October 7, 2007)
- ^ BirminghamUK: Landmarks around Birmingham (1)
- ^ New Year’s Present for Birmingham’s Office Market - Locate Birmingham, January 23, 2007 (Accessed October 7, 2007)
- ^ Targetfollow: Developments - Baskerville House
- ^ Baskerville House reaches completion - Building Services and Environmental Engineer, April 24, 2007 (Accessed October 7, 2007)
- ^ Baskerville House scoops top gong at awards evening - Baskerville House press release, July 27, 2007 (Accessed October 7, 2007)
- ^ Birmingham.gov.uk: Industry and Genius
- ^ Noszlopy, George; Jeremy Beach (1998). Public Sculpture of Birmingham. Liverpool University Press, 25. ISBN 0853236925.
- A Guide to the Buildings of Birmingham, Peter Leather, ISBN 0-7524-2475-0
[edit] External links
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