Monday 28 December 2009

City of London walk

A wintry walk yesterday with the Knit Nurse, taking in the highs (quite literally) and lows of the City of London.

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The highs: Despite the chill wind and cloud, there were wonderful views to be had from the top of the Monument (read all about it here). St Paul's Cathedral also looked dramatic, its dome caught by the late afternoon sun.

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The lows: Some of the lumpen new developments in the City, ranging from Foster & Partners' bulging The Walbrook to the mystifyingly ghastly One New Change, which is slap bang next to St Paul's and designed by Jean Nouvel (working with Sidell Gibson Architects). Sir Christopher and his old friend Robert Hooke, who together designed the Monument, must be spinning in their graves.

Monday 14 December 2009

Southwark Council Headquarters by BDGworkfutures

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Some images of the recently-completed headquarters for Southwark Council, designed by BDGworkfutures.

Their design houses 2,100 council staff under one roof, who were previously spread around various sites in the borough. Flexible working practices are promoted through plenty of informal meeting areas, communal tea points and open-plan workspaces


Located on London's Tooley Street, the building is a fascinating mix of old and new. Architect AHMM restored a warehouse that fronts the street, which links to a new-build office building. There's a dramatic central lobby, soaring barrel-vaulted ceilings on the top floor and extensive use of exposed concrete for passive cooling.

You can read more about the project in the latest issue of onoffice, which features a sprinkling of my images (alas, very naughtily uncredited).

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Thursday 3 December 2009

Photography is not a crime

At the risk of getting all political, it is with increasing fear and horror that I keep reading reports of photographers being harassed by the police, security guards and members of the public when out taking photos. It's even made the cover of today's Independent.

It reflects a wider change in our society and culture, the result of multiple factors including concerns ranging from terrorism to health and safety (tripod trip). In the UK at least, there has also been rising fears over paedophilia and a change in how many perceive their personal privacy, not least because of tabloid newspapers and celebrity magazines.

I've been stopped by the police on several occasions (luckily for nothing more than a brief chat) but also got involved in a scary incident at Bexhill-on-Sea earlier this year with some members of the public, when I was shooting the De La Warr Pavilion as part of my CABE Sea Change project.

There are many reports of the police exceeding their powers (particularly community support officers) and one of the biggest issues is that many police forces have been granted use of Section 44 of the 2000 Terrorism Act, which allows them to use "stop and search" without any requirements of "reasonable suspicion". However, due to fears of providing information for potential terrorists, it is nigh-on impossible to discover the "authorised areas" where these powers are being used.

According to the British Journal of Photography, Derbyshire is the only county where police officers have never used S44 for stop and search. So I think my next photography project will be about the Peak District, or something to do with Chesterfield.

The BJP has set up a visual campaign at www.not-a-crime-com

I believe that photography is an essential tool to help us to understand ourselves, our society and the places where we live. It will only be after documentary "street" photography is no longer possible - and Martin Parr thinks that day isn't too far away - that we will realise what we have lost.

Wednesday 25 November 2009

Maharaja at the V&A, designed by Urban Salon

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Relatively hot off the presses, here are some of my images of the V&A's latest exhibition blockbuster Maharaja: The Splendour of India's Royal Courts.

Urban Salon designed the show, working with the V&A's curators as well as lighting designer DHA, graphic designer Wood McGrath and sound artist Janek Schaefer. 

The ravishing design looks far more substantial than your usual temporary exhibition space, and manages to combine lots of objects (more than 250, from a pearl carpet to a 1927 Rolls Royce Phantom) with enough space so you don't suffer a panic attack when it gets busy.

The shoot took place on three early mornings, as we only had restricted access in narrow time slots. However, the repeat visits really gave me the chance to experience this magical exhibition to the full. It's not a subject that I know much about, and in particular found the Art Deco and modernist pieces fascinating.

The exhibition runs until 17 January 2010.

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Thursday 19 November 2009

Anish Kapoor at the Royal Academy

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A trip with the Knit Nurse yesterday that included the Anish Kapoor exhibition at the Royal Academy.

The show is well worth a visit; some works really draw you in and play with your senses of perception and orientation. Others are visceral and violent, yet at the same time strangely beautiful.

Despite the dismal weather, we were still able to enjoy Tall tree and the eye (pictured) which is on display in the courtyard.

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Sunday 15 November 2009

Chiswick House Café, London, by Caruso St John Architects

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Some images taken today of the new café at Chiswick House, which looks pretty complete and is due to open in the Spring.

One of the pleasures of having a studio at Pavilion Studios in Chiswick is my walk to work, which takes me through the grounds of Chiswick House. For those of you who haven't visited, it's a beautiful neo-Palladian villa that was built by the third Earl of Burlington in 1729 to display is art collection (as you do).

The house itself is pretty spectacular and well worth a visit, but equally wondrous are the gardens, which are considered a seminal piece of landscape design. Designed by William Kent, it features formal Italianate elements, including temples and exotic statuary, which were part of the house's original landscaping scheme. Kent subsequently redesigned parts of the garden in a much more naturalistic style, and the results are regarded as the birthplace of the English Landscape Movement, and inspired such significant parks and gardens as New York's Central Park and the grounds of Blenheim Palace.

The gardens are currently being restored, in a major project that includes a new café building designed by architect Caruso St John. It features huge floor-to-ceiling windows and a stone colonnade, which has apparently been inspired by the "arcaded facades of the stable wings of country villas in the Veneto". While this may sound rather inappropriate for grey London, a visit to the house and gardens – with their avenues of exotic statues and cyprus trees – really feels like a trip to an Italian palazzo, especially on a summer's day.

On a bright day like today, the render and Portland stone facade of the new café really gleams in the sunshine, with lovely shadows of trees playing across the walls.

Now I just have to wait until the café opens - hopefully a good place to get a decent coffee and sarnie at lunchtimes.

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Thursday 12 November 2009

The Bugworld Experience, Liverpool, designed by MET Studio

And now for something completely different...

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The Bugworld Experience is a new visitor attraction at Liverpool's glorious Albert Dock. It's not for the faint-hearted, with its spiders, millipedes, ants and other creepy crawlies.

Designed by MET Studio, the attraction opened earlier in the summer. Being arachnophobic, some of the shots were quite challenging, even if the varmints were behind glass.

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Wednesday 11 November 2009

Applemore College in the press

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My photos of Applemore College, designed by SHH, have been given extremely wide coverage in the press over recent weeks. Here are a couple of examples, in Frame and FX magazines.

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Tuesday 10 November 2009

Novotel London Tower Bridge, public spaces by Blacksheep

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Another recent shoot - the lobby, bar and restaurant spaces at the newly-refurbished Novotel London Tower Bridge.

Designed by Blacksheep, the brief was to "create a seamless integration of the brand's appeal to both its business and leisure-user target markets". The interior has helped upgrade the hotel from 3* to 4*, and features London imagery and a vibrant colour palette. Scroll down for more shots!

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Monday 9 November 2009

FCO offices Milton Keynes by Forme UK

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Here's a small selection from my recent shoot at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office's new premises in Milton Keynes, designed by Forme UK. The layout strictly follows a grid and uses furniture to help provide colour and to subdivide the space. There are some very swish breakout spaces, such as the one show above.

It was my first ever trip to the centre of Milton Keynes and it's an interesting, if rather strange place. Just like the FCO's offices, there's a strong adherence to the grid, which means that travelling around the place is quite disorientating but you can never get very lost. It's well maintained but lacks any sort of civic gravitas, with a rather flimsy feel to all the commercial developments. I'd like to go back and explore some more, as it's widely regarded as the most successful of the UK's post-war new towns.

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Sunday 8 November 2009

SHH dining rooms 2: Cherbourg School, Eastleigh

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Following hot on the heels of Applemore College yesterday, here are some my images of Cherbourg Primary School in Eastleigh, designed by SHH, which was completed earlier this year.

It was a nostalgic trip to Eastleigh as I recall spending a lot of time waiting for trains at Eastleigh station while a student at the University of Southampton.

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Saturday 7 November 2009

Applemore College, Hythe, by SHH

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This month I'm determined to get through the backlog of shoots from during the summer which are waiting to be featured on this here blog. And here's one of them: The newly-revamped dining facilities at Applemore College secondary school in Hythe - which is just across the water from my old stamping ground of Southampton.

The project is one of two designed by Spencer Harris Hogan (SHH) - I'll post pictures of the other in the near future - commissioned by UK government body The School Food Trust. SHH worked in close consultation with The Sorrell Foundation on these test projects to improve poor dining environments in schools.

At Applemore College, the robust new interior features bold graphics and colours aimed at giving an urban feel. And it seems to be holding up pretty well to the abuse thrown at it every lunchtime...


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Friday 6 November 2009

Bank of New York Mellon, Manchester, by BDGworkfutures

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A small selection of images that I recently took of Bank of New York Mellon's slick new offices in Manchester. Designer BDGworkfutures had previously completed the bank's offices at Canary Wharf, and the Manchester workplace uses a similar design language, including white lacquered joinery and warm accent colours.

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