Tuesday, 3 January 2012

Liverpool Anglican Cathedral

image courtesy of www.wikipedia.org

This is a building which has particularly struck me whilst visiting Liverpool to attend talks and gigs. The tension between it and the Roman Catholic Metropolitan Cathedral, separated from one another only by half a mile of Hope Street, is tangible. The scene is evocative of the historical divide between the indigenous Lancashire inhabitants of Liverpool and its growing Irish Catholic community during its heyday as a key port in the 19th century.


Based on a 1901 competition entry by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott, what claims to be the 'largest cathedral in the world' turned out rather differently to how he originally intended it. Its construction was severely delayed by two World Wars, with Scott himself having died by the time of its completion. Having seen other examples of Scott's oeuvre, I was surprised to learn that this was not until the late 70s, given its evident circa-1900 Gothic Revival style and brickwork. Remarkably, the comparatively modern Metropolitan Cathedral was completed over a decade earlier.



The Anglican Cathedral's Lady Chapel is described scathingly by John Thomas as a "feminized building" which would seem designed, in the absence of a Catholic cathedral, for Anglo-Catholic worship. This adds to its contentious character, the most ironic aspect of which is perhaps Scott's Catholic faith, initially unknown to the cathedral committee when selecting a competition winner.

Building I'm interested in seeing: Adnams warehouse, Suffolk

image courtesy of http://www.aecom.com/



The 2006 Adnams brewery distribution warehouse in Suffolk, a feat of sustainable building design, is a reassuringly functional example of a 'hemp concrete' structure. Although I am generally a supporter of alternative builing materials, I am particularly impressed by their translation to mainstream uses such as this. It also features a 6000 square metre sedum roof incorporating local wildflowers and wild grasses, as detailed at http://www.livingroofs.org/

Recent experience: Balehaus at Bath

image courtesy of http://www.mocoloco.com/



Whilst in Bath recently I visited the Balehaus, a novel strawbale house designed by researchers at the University in partnership with the modular materials producer ModCell. It consists of limewashed prefabricated strawbale wall sections with a wooden facade, and is a regular cubic shape for easy modelling of performance. Balehaus' walls have been shown to yield no more than 4mm under simulated wind conditions equivalent to 120mph gusts, as the website http://www.greenbuildingpress.co.uk/ chronicles. As well as being impressed by its technical record and innovative sustainable construction, it struck me as a wonderfully neat and attractive example of strawbale building, which, as Craig White of ModCell comments, combines the "lowest carbon footprint and the best operational CO2 performance of any system of construction currently available". Its combination of aesthetics and ease of construction make it an option for truly sustainable mass housing - a pleasant alternative to the prefabs of the past. I see it as inspiring progress towards this end.


my rough sketch of the Balehaus