An appreciation of Nairn’s Towns (2013 Notting Hill Editions)
The reprinting of Ian Nairn’s collection of pieces from The
Listener magazine during the 1960’s presents the opportunity to appreciate how prescient
his writing about places was. Those who have more recently revisited Outrage (Nairn 1955) may agree that so much of
what he feared and predicted has come to pass. The essays collected in Nairn’s
Towns are, however, even more specific to place and many of the themes and
issues raised can be reconsidered in the case of those locations
with which we are most familiar. In my case the Cardiff of the 1960’s described
by Ian Nairn remained recognisable through the following decade and many of his
observations still ring true some fifty years later . This note is offered as a
supplement to his essay on that city, one which revisits and develops some of his
observations and themes with the advantage of hindsight. There have been very
significant physical changes in Cardiff but the underlying issues in Nairn’s writing
have proved to be enduring.
For example, in the second paragraph of his essay he
describes the aspect of the city presented on leaving Cardiff Central railway
station as the embodiment of T.S Eliot’s ‘shabby equipment always
deteriorating’. The ‘joke modern’ Empire Pool has of course since disappeared but
been replaced by Even-More-Of-A-Joke-Post- Modern and even less digestible
slices of ‘commercial hackwork’. As Owen Hathersley observes in his editorial
footnote to Nairn’s piece, in Cardiff a lot of replacement equipment has degraded
from flashy to trashy rather too quickly.
It is now planned that the prospect from the Central Station
will be graced with a new regional headquarters for the British Broadcasting
Corporation to be designed by the Foster Partnership. This then echoes another
theme in Nairn’s discourse, that of the domination of those “London firms …dumping
down their most slapdash agglomerations.” Much of his short essay is concerned
with the lack of a distinctive architectural style in the city and the
dominance of external influence. He comments that “Most of the local firms seem
happy to follow the well-beaten trail of mediocrity”, the one notable exception
at that time noted as the Alex Gordon Partnership. Even this was qualified, the
designer of the (then modern) building singled out by Nairn for praise being an
Englishman. This may be seen to have been be a persistent trend in the
intervening period and buildings by Welsh architects of note are the exception
to illustrate, if not prove, the rule suggested by Nairn in the 1960’s. Of
their work a debate may be had on Nairn’s implication that such exceptions are
notable in being rooted in the vernacular, as might whether the question as to
why ‘the Welsh are no good at visual things’ posed in his third paragraph may
still be relevant fifty years later. The real issue may, however, be about
confidence in the commissioning of architecture.
An argument may be advanced that the lack of such confidence
in Cardiff is embedded in the DNA of the place. In its period of most
significant growth from the 1830’s it may be said to have been built by the
Irish for a Scot and was, outside the largely mediaeval settlement boundary, a
planted settlement and, in effect, a company town. New development took place mainly
on the landed estates of the Marquesses of Bute and subsequently on those of
Lords Tredegar to the east and Plymouth to the west. The development of
aristocratic estates elsewhere in Britain informed the initial planned
development of Butetown and the architectural style adopted was essentially
late Georgian.
Only fragments of such development have survived from the time
of the Second Marquess of Bute and much of what remained had already been, or
was being cleared by the time of Nairn’s essay. This was an aspirational form
of urban extension by the Second Marquess of Bute and, had it succeeded, might
have imposed a more enduring (but imported) architectural style on the city.
The reasons for its failure are more fully detailed by others (Daunton 1977, Davies 1981, Davies 1982, Davies 2009)
but the construction of the railways, essential to the success of the Bute Docks
and growth of coal exportation, made Butetown an unattractive location for
wealthier residential occupiers who relocated to new development north of the
main line railway. Butetown and Newtown became and remained literally the
‘wrong side of the tracks’ and dominated by the ‘mean stucco terraces’ referred
to by Nairn.
The direct route from Cardiff Castle to the Pierhead
intended by the Second Marquess of Bute perhaps had some symbolic civic intent
and in that respect it also failed. Bute Street became, as Nairn accurately
describes it, the major thoroughfare of the “Tiger Bay of lurid legend…. A
straight mile of shops and cafes facing the long dockyard wall: suicidal, but
in an almost noble way….” His observation that everyone he spoke to seemed to
say that the wild days of Tiger Bay were ‘just before their time’ has the ring
of truth. Certainly, in my experience, anyone who even referred to the area as
‘Tiger Bay’ could be viewed with some suspicion. The Docks, as Butetown was
more generally known, certainly remained a distinctly separate part of the city
and, if not quite ‘lurid’ certainly offered more alternative forms of
entertainment than could be found north of the railway. Although the heart had
been torn from it and the shops and cafes of Bute Street replaced with what
Nairn described as “a council estate of well- intentioned but implacable
aridity” there remained sufficient pockets of misbehaviour to attract those in
relentless pursuit of the elusive good time until the 1980’s ( see http://rhcroydon.blogspot.co.uk/2013/08/and-now-its-deja-bayview-again.html
)
In the 1980’s a new wave of even more comprehensive
redevelopment, by then called ‘regeneration’, was undertaken and history
repeated itself with another attempt to physically connect the city centre with
the waterfront 150 years after Lord Bute’s initial development. The result is
what, in his footnote to Nairn’s essay, Owen Hathersley dismisses as “… a
‘boulevard’ of shocking banality” slicing the dispiritingly cheap and tacky
restaurants and miserable flats from the council estate of Bute Town. A fuller
and no less damning appraisal of what is now called Lloyd George Avenue is
offered by Professor John Punter who outlines the original design aspirations
for that project (Punter 2006). The intentions of the
promoters of this later development were, perhaps, even more expressly symbolic
than those of the Second Marquess of Bute. Originally referred to as ‘The Mall’
and with clearly stated aspirations that it would provide a form of ceremonial
route the promotion was accompanied by much rhetoric. Also, to echo the earlier
theme of imported design raised by Nairn, the promoters sought to purchase the
cultural capital represented by the international reputation of David Mackay of
MBM and thereby their association with the Olympic Village at Barcelona. It was
clearly intended to be something more than a wider than average residential thoroughfare
but it failed to achieve that. What now
exists bears very little resemblance to the design purchased from David Mackay
and the reasons for this are more complex than may be outlined here. What can
be said simply is that the original design was not executed as intended and the reason for the failure of Lloyd George
Avenue does not lay in the observation made in 1951 by Sir Hugh Casson that the
British do not like rhetoric in their buildings and that there are surprisingly
few ceremonial avenues in our cities (Brunius and Harvey 1952). Cardiff is an exception in
that respect. The intended dimension of Lloyd George Avenue were those of King
Edward VII Avenue in Cardiff’s civic centre at Cathays Park which Nairn
describes as “..the one piece of planning for which Cardiff is famous – and by
which local worthies convince themselves that the face of the city is
perfect….”. He is largely dismissive of all but the City Hall and states that
“..the other buildings form a stone zoo, one weary neo-Classical hulk after
another, lumped down on a regular grid. No shops, wide pavements, parked cars,
everything at one removed from life.”
In many respects Nairn is correct in that Cathays Park is
something of an aberration, a capacious compound dominated by imported
Edwardian architectural styles. That is, however, what makes it unique as were
the circumstances which brought it into being and conserved its purely civic
function. The construction of a civic centre in that form was made possible by
its retention in the single ownership of the Bute family and its sale to the
city in 1898. At the insistence of the Third Marquess of Bute the form of
permitted development was widely spaced buildings and avenues and the use of
the park was restricted to civic, educational and cultural functions, any
commercial activity being expressly prohibited. This has had significant consequences
for the city to the present day which are outside the scope of these notes.
Here it is only noted that the availability of nearly 60 acres in the heart of
the town of over 150,000 people at the end of the 19th century
presented a unique opportunity at a time when the exportation of coal through
the port of Cardiff was reaching the peak of its growth and prosperity. The
procurement of Cathays Park by the Corporation marked the ascendancy of civic
society although, as already noted, the influence and patronage of the Bute
estate remained a persistent factor not least in the establishment of those
institutions which consolidated Cardiff’s position as the dominant urban centre
in Wales.
The antithesis of Nairn’s essay is that written by Dewi Prys
Thomas in praise of the architect of the main University College Building (now
Cardiff University) of 1909 (Thomas 1983). The latter evokes his
personal memories of seeing Cathays Park for the first time in 1934 when those
original Edwardian buildings stood in relative isolation in what he describes
as being comparatively open parkland.
“A vast urban space stretched before me towards distant
domed buildings. They were white. Unreal
to my northern eyes, they shimmered in the glow of late summer. No Welsh Office
impeded a prospect which, I felt sure, could not be bettered by the Tuilleries
Gardens. And the broad avenue flanked by venerable elms, at its far end a
magnificent white campanile, must shame even the Champs Elysees.”
Much infill had taken place by the time of Nairn’s visit and
has taken place since. Furthermore his remarks in 1967 on the increased number
of cars parked in the area since 1964 are apposite in that the avenues and the
spaces between buildings are now largely filled with parked cars during the
day. It remains, however, possible to stand in Alexandra Gardens at the centre
of the park (where the unbroken ranks of vehicles are screened by hedges) and
imagine that sense of space and of large, white buildings set amongst trees
appreciated by Dewi Prys Thomas. Thomas is very much more appreciative of the
individual buildings and a point which may be made in passing here is that he
was a gifted architectural teacher and practitioner who perhaps displayed the talents
that Nairn sought in a regional architect. His design of the headquarters of
Gwynedd County Council at Caernarfon attests his skill and, moreover, both the
humour and humanity that Nairn attributes to the Welsh. On the matter of
urbanism it is also interesting that Thomas helped Alwyn Lloyd and Herbert
Jackson in the development of the South Wales Outline Plan of 1949 (Lloyd and Jackson 1949). This also takes a very
different view of Cathays Park to that expressed by Nairn and makes particular
reference to the expanses of parkland in Central Cardiff, again a direct legacy
of aristocratic landownership through preceding centuries. This is specifically
referred to as ‘beneficial’ through “.. the incidence of what we should now
describe as ‘zoning’ in the structure of its plan……Consequently the centre of
Cardiff and the chief streets disposed around the castle escaped the mixture of
industry with business and residential streets that so often mars the centres
of other cities.”
The negative effect of such ‘zoning’ has perhaps been
touched upon earlier by reference to the consignment of the area south of the
railway to low quality housing and industry and this is dealt with at some
length by Daunton (1977). By Nairn’s account Cathays Park “sealed off the city from
its northern suburbs” and, whilst there is a distinct physical separation it is
questionable whether this is detrimental to the northern part of the city. The
city centre has, with the constraints imposed by the river and railways,
remained distinct and, even within that perimeter, has experienced significant
decline, change, redevelopment and resurgence. In that respect Cathays Park
cannot be said to have had an adverse impact on the commercial health or
vitality of the retail and business core of the city. A factor which Nairn
observed in 1967 which has had more noticeable impact is traffic which has been
effectively removed from the retail core but, because of the restrictions
imposed by the river and parkland, is now channelled between the Castle/
Cathays Park and the retail core or supplements the barrier of the main line
railway between the city centre and Butetown by its diversion to the south.
A few more points may be made on issues relating to Cathays
Park. In his footnote to Nairn’s essay Owen Hathersley is more forgiving of the
individual buildings but encapsulates in his choice of words the essential
character of the place. By referring to the “..
single –use, monolithic authoritarianism..” of the ensemble Hathersley,
perhaps unintentionally, underlines that it has become the economic location of choice for filmmakers wishing to
recreate the Berlin of the Third Reich. Notwithstanding
the prohibition on commercial use of the park, its accessible and available
collection of fine Speeriod property seem to find a ready market for such use.
We are thus treated to the darkly amusing paradox of the Temple of Peace
doubling as the Pentagon or Reich Chancellery.
In this respect alone it might, by association, be seen to represent “…an
utterly alien model for urban improvement” as Nairn suggests.
That is, of
course, guilt by fictional association and it would be interesting to ponder on
what Nairn would have made of a building which is the real deal, the former
Welsh Office, now Welsh Government building built in the 1970’s. Designed by
the one firm singled out by Nairn for praise, the Alex Gordon Partnership (see
above) it could be said that its architectural influences are truly
international. A forbidding example of Cold War architecture squatting above an
underground command centre it is a defensible structure which shares many
design features with Kensington Barracks. The Architects Journal called it ‘a
symbol of closed inaccessible government’, conveying an impression of
‘bureaucracy under siege’ (Newman 2004). (Some may see this as the
embodiment of form following function.)
That building has, since Nairn’s visits, been supplemented
by another in Cardiff Bay which is referred to by Owen Hathersley in his
footnote. It must be noted that the
debating chamber of the Welsh Assembly – The Senedd- also echoes that dominant
theme of Nairn’s essay which is the provincial lack of confidence in the
commissioning of architecture and the persistent practice of importing an ‘established
brand’. In this respect the selection of the (Lord) Rogers Partnership looked,
to some, suspiciously like a foregone conclusion. (One very distinguished
academic presciently remarking some time before the competition that the winner
would inevitably be one of ‘the Three Tenors of architecture’). It also calls
to question the earlier quotation from Sir Hugh Casson that “the British do not
like rhetoric in their buildings” as it swept in on waves of it. Several
architectural writers question the validity of claims that architecture can
accurately represent the forms of government of those who inhabit it (Sudjic and Jones 2001, Vale 2008, Meades 2012). In this case it is debateable
that the Senedd building represents an ‘open and democratic’ form of regional
government for, as Owen Hathersley notes, to enter it one must negotiate ‘airport
style security’. A more cynical observer might look below the superficial
superstructure and note that the occupants administer second-hand-me-down power
crouched underground behind walls encircled by tank traps.
We return then to the Bute influence on the city and ‘the
glorious absurdity’ of William Burges’ Victorian fantasias of Cardiff Castle
and Castell Coch. Again we can say that this has little to do with Wales and
the Welsh. These are, like Cathays Park, a complete aberration and of a very
different architectural stripe. They are, as Nairn suggests, the work of a
joker but it is questionable as to whether their location in Cardiff was in any
way influential in the design. The Third Marquess of Bute was reputedly one of
the richest men in the world at the time and could afford extremely elaborate
follies pretty much anywhere. It may be the case, as Jonathan Meades
mischievously suggests that “Between them Bute and Burgess suffered religious
mania, opium addiction and tertiary syphilis- the trinity of afflictions that
made high Victorian architecture glorious. It was religious mania that
determined that the styles that were acceptable. But it was in laudanum and
venereally founded madness that determined the manner of their interpretation” (Meades 2012 p195).
This may be more plausible than any association with the High
Victorian Gothic ideals of Ruskin and Pugin and adherence to the architectural
principles they espoused. The third Marquess of Bute rented Chiswick House, the
very epitome of the Palladian style, as a London residence and, later, St Johns
Lodge in John Nash’s Regents Park. Both represent forms of architecture
directly opposite those idealised by the promoters of the Gothic Revival.
Nairn makes passing reference to the “implacable Victorian
gables” of Cathedral Road but otherwise makes none to the suburbs north of the
city centre which evidence the influence of Bute and Burges on
the appearance of the city. Where his father, the Second Marquess, had failed to impose a lasting
order on planned settlement, the Third Marquess had a far more enduring
impact on its character. Nairn states that the development along the eastern
side of Cathays Park did not redress the balance of the architecture and there
is indeed something of a disjoint. However the architecture of Park Place and
Cathedral Road largely pre-dated the construction of Cathays Park and should be
considered in the context of the Castle. It is necessary to see those buildings
flanking what were then the castle grounds, now Cathays Park and Sophia
Gardens. From the southern end of both Park Place and Cathedral Road one can
still discern a hierarchy of later Victorian architecture, the grander
buildings taking their cue from Burges’ Park House.
As with the later Georgian
form favoured in the time of the Second Marquess this may again be seen to be
an alien or imported style. The larger and earliest of these buildings have a
vaguely ‘Scottish’ character but this moves to something which has been called
‘Cardiff Gothic’ and the dominant features are those gables, bay windows,
trefoil arches and other devices which one may associate with that (Edwards 2005 A, Edwards 2005 B). This evolves further and,
through the imposition of a form of design coding by the Bute (and other major
aristocratic estates to east and west) a uniformity of style and materials.
These are, particularly on the Bute estate lands, imposed on a form of estate
development which itself follows the hierarchy of earlier Georgian estate
development based upon squares, gardens, avenues and streets. The larger houses
incorporate all the features and the smaller less.
This then reached its apex in the prosperous Edwardian suburbs
when Cardiff was at its peak of commercial prosperity relatively (Long 1993). There is still a remarkable
degree of architectural cohesion in areas such as Roath Park and Penylan with
fine variations in the detail between groups of houses but overall feeling of
unity in materials and general style. As to whether this is a good thing is
largely subjective. What may be noted here is that the character of Victorian
and Edwardian Cardiff was dictated by the estate development policy of those
landed estates, principally those of the Butes. Unlike other industrial cities
there was little opportunity for individual architectural expression of the
late Victorian and Edwardian nouveau riche. We then refer back, in conclusion,
to Nairn’s observations on regional architectural identity with the suggestion
that architectural patronage was constrained from the outset in an area which
has been fruitful for innovation and development of individual style- the
Commissioned House.
Overall this may be offset by the amenity level afforded
through the extensive parkland and smaller public spaces created through such
estate development policy. As regards the beneficial aspects of such
development the self-interest of the aristocratic land owners need not automatically
be prefixed with the word ‘enlightened’. As Daunton (1977) explains there was
an underlying commercial rationale in the creation of such amenity and Cardiff
is exceptional largely by having one dominant landowner who inspired its
development from the 1830’s and a few others who followed suit in its Victorian
and Edwardian suburban development. Nairn very accurately reads the eventual
impact and outcome of that regime in his visits to the city in the 1960’s and,
as hopefully outlined, many of his observations remain relevant to this day. It
is in this respect that greater familiarity with the subject matter of his
writing on the built environment provides even greater appreciation of its
quality and his perspicacity.
References
Brunius,
J. B. and M. Harvey (1952). Brief City. London.
Lloyd, T. A.
and H. Jackson (1949). South Wales Outline Plan. M. o. T. a. C. Planning.
London, HMSO.
Manchester, Manchester
University Press.
Just found you here Rob, excellent blog.
ReplyDeleteThanks Tudor. To date the blog has been 'sporadic' to put it mildly but I hope to make more regular posts in coming month. Best wishes. Rob
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