Battersea Power Station owners Treasury Holdings/REO have been arguing the chimneys are unsafe and need to be demolished and rebuilt, dismissing an alternative report by a team of three companies of concrete experts brought together by the World Monuments Fund & Twentieth Century Society that revealed there is no sign of structural distress in the chimneys and that the chimneys can be repaired for half the cost of demolition and rebuilding.
Given the abysmal history of the Power Station’s owners’ reluctance to do anything but the absolute minimum of repairs critics are doubtful they would ever replace the chimneys once demolished- leaving a featureless pile of bricks and little to protect. No doubt, like with the roof, promises will be made to replace the chimneys, but various unavoidable economic or unforeseen technical problems will be cited as external reasons not to replace them. By getting planning permission from Wandsworth Borough Council to take down the chimneys Parkview, the previous owners, greatly added to the resale value of the site when they flipped it. It is a well known property developers’ trick when faced with a listed building to destroy or degrade the key feature that makes a building worth saving e.g. the facade of the beautiful Firestone Building was bulldozed leaving nothing worth protecting.
The “unsafe” nature of the chimneys is also used as an excuse to not open up the river front land for public use. During the rare times the Power Station is open to the public the whole site is a hard hat area and the roofless interior space between the chimneys completely out of bounds for safety reasons. Interestingly when cash is on the table this same space can accommodate a giant marquee for public events.
Marquee in between "unsafe" chimneys.
Rob Tincknell, managing director of Treasury Holdings, expressed our concerns exactly when he told Jonathan Prynn, Consumer Business Editor for the Evening Standard 04.06.09
Unveiled: the ‘last chance’ for Battersea Power Station
[Tincknell].. hopes the chimneys, thought to have been beyond repair, may be saved. The previous plan saw them being replaced by replicas. He said: “If this scheme does not make it, there is no power station. If you look back in history there has been disaster after disaster, rubbish scheme after rubbish scheme. We have designed, consulted and are about to put in a planning application. The project is in the hands of developers who know what they are doing.”
That’s what we are worried about.
——————————————————————————————————————————
Visit Spectacle’s on-going Battersea Power Station Project
Watch a video trailer here: Battersea Power Station – The Story So Far
Subscribe to our newsletter mailing list, visit our contact page to subscribe
If you live in the neighbourhood and would like to get involved, contact us here putting Battersea Power Station in your message.
Click here to view more Battersea Power Station links
Spectacle Home Page
If you would like to object to the planning applications for Battersea Power Station you have until January 31st 2010 click here for more details.
For more information about Spectacle’s Battersea Power Station project including video interviews.
To read more blogs about Battersea Power Station