22 giugno - 31
agosto 2012
A major public exhibition opening next week – The Developing City –
will display top architects’ visions of the City of London in 2050.
The Square Mile will become greener with more parks and verdant
riverside walkways while the buildings will have to become taller to
accommodate continued growth, they say.
The exhibition explores the relationship between the architecture of
the City of London and its success as a global mercantile centre, It
takes place at The Walbrook Building – a Foster + Partners’-designed
building on Cannon Street – between 21 June and 9 September. It
shows the growth of the City since Roman times, the impact of the
Great Fire and the Blitz and how the current financial turmoil will
affect the sort of buildings that get built.
This headline event of the London Festival of Architecture 2012 has
been organised by NLA – London’s Centre for the Built Environment
with the support of City of London Corporation.
The exhibition will feature 40 scale models of recent and proposed
schemes in the City. In addition, three teams of architects,
supported by consultants and property professionals, are displaying
their ‘Visions for 2050’ in response to a series of drivers of
change, including governance, climate change and banking regulation.
The teams are:
Gensler with Eric Parry Architects, Happold Consulting, Buro Happold,
LSE, Royal College of Art, Siemens and RWDI; the team proposes a
major park from Hampstead to the City on the route of the old River
Fleet and along the banks of the Thames.
Woods Bagot with Brookfield and Hilson Moran, who call for the City
to ‘grow up’ and build more tall buildings to the east so that it
can provide better quality public space at ground level.
John Robertson Architects with British Land, Land Securities and
Arup illustrate a de-carbonised City with pedestrianised streets,
more green space and a new financial centre at Aldgate.
Peter Murray, curator of the exhibition and Chairman of NLA:
London's Centre for the Built Environment said:
«The exhibition looks at the way the places and buildings of the
City have changed to suit the needs of the businesses that operate,
and succeed, there. Over centuries the Square Mile has changed from
a busy port to the financial capital of the world; it has been
destroyed and rebuilt; redundant buildings have been replaced and
new ways of working accommodated. It continually reinvents itself
and will continue to do so. The exhibition shows what the City could
look like in 2050: a greener City, a taller City - in the right
places – a quieter, cleaner City, a City that places quality of life
at the top of the agenda as one of the key ingredients that attracts
high level workers to the Square Mile».
The exhibition will be accompanied by a series of breakfast talks,
curator’s tours, walks, building visits and other special events.
For more information, please visit
www.thedevelopingcity.com
PROGRAMME OF EVENTS
The Developing City is accompanied by a programme of events,
including breakfast talks, curator-led exhibition tours, evening
debates and lectures, building visits and walks.
Most events are free and take place in, or start from, the
exhibition space at The Walbrook Building. Please note that booking
ahead recommended.
For further details, event updates and booking, please check The
Developing City website.
Breakfast talks
Early morning talks and debates on the history and future of
development in the Square Mile.
Friday 22 June – Visions of the City in 2050
Three teams of architects, developers and property professionals
present their visionary images of how the City might look in 2050 as
it adapts to changes in governance, infrastructure, climate and
work, with responses from leading City figures.
Friday 6 July – The Resilient City
The City’s ability to adapt and respond to major events, including
pestilence, fires, the Blitz and IRA bombings, has ensured its place
as centre of mercantile trade for the past 800 years. In this
breakfast talk we examine how the City responded to major events
throughout its history.
Friday 20 July – Conservation Today
What challenges does the City face to maintain and conserve the best
of its heritage while meeting the needs of a competitive global
city?
Friday 3 August – Buildability
Sir Stuart Lipton recently proposed a challenge to designers to
reduce the cost of building in London, while maintaining exceptional
quality and energy credentials. In this talk we look at how two
developer/contractors and their design teams, with unrivalled
expertise in the construction of tall buildings, address issues of
buildability to deliver office space that is efficient both to build
and to use.
Friday 17 August – What Lies Beneath
The Roman Temple of Mithras was discovered here along Walbrook in
the 1950s during rebuilding work, and is currently being excavated
on the building site just next door. Hear about the impact that key
archaeological discoveries have had on our understanding of the
development of this international financial capital.
Friday 31 August – The Edge Condition: Emerging areas of the City
As areas on the fringe of the Square Mile, such as Farringdon,
Shoreditch, and Aldgate develop into new centres for creative,
financial, media and technology industries, this event will examine
how the City is growing and adapting to the needs of new industries,
and debate the condition of edge spaces on the ‘red line’.
Curator's tours
Peter Murray, curator of The Developing City, leads guided tours of
the exhibition, discussing the key themes, and answering your
questions. Tours take place on alternate Tuesday and Friday
lunchtimes, plus some Saturdays.
Walks
Twin walking tours, led by the Blue Badge Guides, covering both
eastern and western areas of the City, will look at the interplay of
new and old architecture, demonstrating the complexity of inserting
new ideas and developments into the dense urban fabric of the City's
medieval street-plan.
Building visits
An opportunity to see inside some of the City's best new buildings,
led by the developers, architects and engineers involved, on
Wednesday lunchtimes.
Late events
Evening talks, lectures and debates followed by drinks and
networking, with some of the key figures involved in documenting or
shaping the City.
Special events
Look out for special one-off events taking place throughout the
exhibition, including a guided walk led by Foster + Partners and
Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners, examining the buildings of two
great architectural practices in the City; and an Archaeological
Site Tour following the route of The Walbrook, one of London's most
significant lost rivers, to examine current archeological sites.
Fonte: CS dell’evento.
Nell’imagine, “The Developing City, Eastern Quarter” credited to
Hayes Davidson
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