Tuesday, 9 April 2013

FROM BAUHAUS TO BUNNY CLUB


 
If you wanted a hotel on the Monopoly board then Park Lane is where you would put it. Someone has finally put another at 45 Park Lane London W1, but only after a long and varied history of development in this location.  Perhaps the most bizarre episode was the grey concrete building ‘designed’ by Walter Gropius which became, for  years, the home of the Playboy Club in the UK. The origins of this are related in The Property Boom by Oliver Marriott. (1)
Jack Cotton, the flamboyant post-war property developer, first enlisted the assistance of Gropius, founder of the Bauhaus and one of the pioneers of modern architecture, to assist following his catastrophic proposals to redevelop the Monico site at Piccadilly Circus. Where many other post-war developers, such as Harry Hyams and Rudolph Palumbo, sought to avoid wider attention to their activities, Cotton, a relentless self –publicist, had by 1959 increasingly come to believe in that publicity. In October he held a press conference to announce to the world his development of the Pan Am Building above Grand Central Station in New York. Flush with that triumph he held his second press conference in seven days to unveil his proposals for Piccadilly Circus. The planning committee of London County Council had already agreed to grant consent - but for one small technicality which remained outstanding. The reaction to the plans and model he displayed at the press conference was one of horror and the Minister of Housing stepped in to call an enquiry. That would have been impossible had Cotton waited until the technicality had been agreed with the planning authority before making his announcement. Marriott conveys the subsequent disfavour of the development proposals by quoting the planning inspector appointed, Colin Buchanan, later famous for the Buchanan Report.

“The applicants must now greatly regret that they put out the perspective sketch which they did at Mr Cotton’s press conference in October 1959. This was a drawing showing the building with a crane on top, and a large advertisement ‘Snap Plom For Vigour’ on the main front panel. Had this not been issued it is a fair guess that the building would now be in course of erection……It does not surprise me that strong feelings have been aroused, for the building could scarcely have been presented in a cruder light.
Following that rejection Cotton persisted with his attempts to redevelop the Monico site for many years and eventually enlisted the world famous Gropius to advance that aim. Until then, Cottons buildings had been designed by his own firm of architects, Cotton, Ballard and Blow, of which he was the principal.  This developer/ architect arrangement appears rather strange fifty years later and Marriott notes that it was rare even then. He comments that the resulting buildings were no better or worse than the post-war average for speculative office buildings but Cotton never sponsored any development of much aesthetic distinction. The Pan Am building may be the exception - although that was fiercely criticised in New York. In the event, producing one of the 20th centuries most famous architects as his adviser did not resolve Cotton’s problems at the Monico site. He did however set Gropius to work on another property that he had acquired at 45 Park Lane.

 Marriott states that this was a Victorian mansion built in 1868 which had been the home of the banker, Sir Phillip Sassoon and, before that the site had been occupied by the diamond magnate, Barney Barnato. Unfortunately this would appear to be incorrect as it would make for an even more ripping yarn. Other sources identify the Sassoon mansion as being at 25 Park Lane.
 Barnato, a semi-literate cockney born in Petticoat Lane was the son of a professional bar-room bouncer and tapster. After a brief career as a prize fighter and music hall turn he followed his brother to South Africa.  There he made a vast fortune in the Kimberley diamond mines and hired Spencer House on his return to London. In 1896 he attended court to stand bail for a friend and gave his address to the magistrate. “But that’s Lord Spencer’s House. Are you his major domo?” demanded the magistrate. “I’m my own bloody domo” shouted back Barnato, the very incarnation of the proverbial ‘rough diamond.’ (2)

Unfortunately he did not live to see the great mansion he was building at Park Lane. He suffered a breakdown, probably delirium tremens, and fell of the ship, an assumed suicide, on his way back from a visit to South Africa. His considerable fortune was divided between his family including his sister Sarah and her husband Abraham Rantzen, great-grandparents of TV presenter Esther Rantzen.
However, to return to the Jack Cotton saga, the architects at Cotton, Ballard and Blow had already completed the preliminary plans when he met Gropius and brought him in to design the elevation of the proposed building. As a result the planning application proceeded smoothly, although virtually the only aesthetic difference was that the building was faced with concrete blocks not Portland Stone as originally intended. This might, given the modus operandii of the post-war developers, have been expected to bring about a cost saving and consequent increase in the potential profit. In this case Marriott notes that the main effect of employing Gropius – apart, perhaps, from the mesmeric impact of his name on the planning authority- was to increase the total cost of the project from £650,000 to £800,000. The completed building was no more or less distinguished than any other speculative office building of the period but, by stroke of fortune, it was the only vacant building between the Dorchester and Hilton Hotels on Park Lane. The Playboy Club deemed this the only suitable location for its first foray into Great Britain in 1966 and Cotton was able to let it to them for a higher rental than the prevailing rate for offices at that time.

Walter Gropius was described by Paul Klee as ‘The Silver Prince’, and by Tom Wolfe as “the most dazzling figure of European architecture during the inter-war years of the 20th century …….irresistibly handsome to women to women, correct and urbane in a classic German manner…….. a figure of calm certitude and conviction at the centre of the maelstrom” It is not known whether he visited his Park Lane creation once occupied by the Playboy Club and dubbed "the Hutch on the Park".  From the foregoing description he might well have held his own with the venue's other clientele which included actors Sean Connery, Michael Caine and Joan Collins, and footballer George Best. As to the Bunny Girls and their outfits it is again regrettable that it was his Bauhaus colleague, Mies van der Rohe who coined the phrase ‘less is more’.(3)
The Playboy Club closed in 1982, following a police raid over suspected illegal gambling, despite no subsequent evidence of wrongdoing. It lay vacant for 13 years until in 2008 Westminster City Council gave consent for conversion into a luxury hotel. In its press release the Council stated that “the outside of the grey concrete-clad building will be redesigned to be made more harmonious with the mixture of neo-Georgian blocks and eighteenth century buildings which line Park Lane and surrounding streets.”  (4) In keeping with the slightly surreal history of the building the press release went on to say that the designs had been drawn up by starchitect Thierry W Despont, who has created homes for the likes of Bill Gates and Calvin Klein and collaborated on the Getty Center galleries in Los Angeles. His resulting confection is a homage to art deco, the ‘drab concrete’ exterior being re-clad with metal fins. Neo-Georgian in this instance may be a tongue in cheek reference to the corresponding reigns of Georges V or VI?

 

 

  
 
 
 
 
 
1.     The Property Boom                        Oliver Marriott

2.       The London Rich                             Peter Thorrold

3.       Bauhaus to Our House                   Tom Wolfe

4.       http://www.westminster.gov.uk/press-releases/2008-09/star-architect-to-turn-former-playboy-club-into-ma/

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