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David Boothroyd wrote:
In article ews.net, "JMUpton2000" securitynovels @ freeuk.com wrote: Would someone mind explaining a mysterious phonomena that seems to be striking random parts of random Underground stations across Central London? I refer to the mysterious case of the phantom panel nicker! There does not appear to be a station left that does not have completely random ceiling panels missing from ticket halls, corridors and platforms. I wondered about posting this when it happened a few weeks ago. I'm a Westminster councillor and sit on one of the Planning Sub-Committees. One application we recently decided was from London Underground and concerned Great Portland Street Station (a listed building: had it not been, then there would have been no requirement to seek planning permission). The application was for the removal and replacement of the tiles throughout the station. You've raised an entirely new topic here. This thread was originally about ceiling panels, which are a comparatively recent feature of station architecture, and nothing to do with mid-19th century listed buildings. For those interested in more detail of the Great Portland Street case, there is a .pdf file at http://tinyurl.com/s7m6u . English Heritage supported the application but the 20th Century Society objected. (Some of the tiles date from the 1920s.) The sub-committee looked at the application and decided that it wasn't happy the case for getting rid of such a large amount of original features. It decided to have a site visit. When this was announced it was revealed to the committee that most of the tiles had actually been removed the previous weekend. We went on the site visit to be told that there had been a confusion when the supervisor had been told "We're good to go" (meaning to the committee), and assumed this meant it was good to go removing the tiles. Although LUL had claimed that the original tiles were all badly damaged, it was quite clear that the damage was not that severe. If most of the tiles had already been removed, how were you able to form that judgement? In any case damage that's "not that severe" can still look unsightly with small chips and crazing of the glaze. Tiles cannot be refurbished in the same way that iron, stone and brick can. When it came back to the committee we decided to refuse the application. As it is now not possible to put the original tiles back, this normally means that whoever was responsible for removing them gets prosecuted for damaging a listed building without permission. And how would that help the travelling public - your electors? The application was actually trying to recreate the original look of the tiling, which is currently a mixture of original vitreous enamel and later ceramic tiles, some quite modern. It would revitalise a "tired public transport facility" in the words of your officers. Your decision appears vindictive to me. What do you actually want LU and Metronet to do now? -- Richard J. (to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address) |
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