Ike Ijeh is happy to stand in the rain waiting for a London icon, but some unfriendly office blocks leave him cold
My wonder has a daily population of 6 million and is one of the most instantly recognisable urban symbols on earth. It is the red London bus, and it is as much a part of London’s urban landscape as the Gherkin – and although not every bus has the superlative design credentials of the old Routemaster, they are the ultimate examples of efficient, utilitarian street architecture.
Along with red post-boxes and K-series telephone boxes, they embody the kind of colour co-ordinated urban branding that Saatchi & Saatchi would die for. And in a vast, sprawling city with an indeterminate boundary and no gateway entrances, they are often one of the few signs that you are actually in the capital. London’s buses prove that “iconic” design has less to do with what an object looks like than what it represents.
New Zealand House, an 18-storey, 1963 office block in central London is my blunder. Why? Because in almost every aspect, from height to materials, it ignores its context and is completely at odds with the scale and character of its surroundings. Its corrosive impact is all the greater as it occupies a prominent corner site near Trafalgar Square and consequently wrecks the composition of local streetscapes.
NZH is a prime example of the damage that has been wrought upon historic locations across London by the insensitive positioning of tall buildings. Other offenders, including Millbank Tower, Park Lane Hilton Hotel and Victoria’s demonic Portland House, were also built in 1963. All indicate the dangers of letting London’s natural appetite for commercial dynamism override its civic responsibility towards urban form, a threat that sadly remains as pertinent today.
Postscript
Ike Ijeh is Building’s architecture correspondent
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