-:Undertaker:-
27-03-2011, 12:55 PM
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1370203/St-Pancras-Renaissance-Opens-150m-restoration.html
Is this the most beautiful hotel in the world? First look at stunning London landmark after £150m restoration and a brush with the bulldozers
For years it has stood empty, its echoing corridors and soaring arches crumbling gently to dust. But the hotel Sir John Betjeman once described as 'too beautiful to survive' has now been restored to its former gothic glory - twinned, of course, with the super-slick accoutrements of 21st century travel. St Pancras Renaissance - formerly the Midland Grand - is already an iconic London landmark, a fairytale fantasy of redbrick and turrets overlooking one of the world's great stations.
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2011/03/26/article-1370203-0D1ACD66000005DC-21_964x588.jpg
Add to this a £150million decade-long transformation, a restaurant run by one of Britain's top chefs plus an in-house spa, and you've got the makings of something rather special. The hotel will officially open on May 5, 138 years to the day since it threw open its glamorous halls to an awe-struck public for the first time. It was built by Sir George Gilbert Scott, the leading Victorian architect whose signature style was gothic revival at its most lavish. He created a labyrinth of sumptuous colour characterised by an obsessive attention to detail.
Tragically, the original incarnation of the hotel only last for 62 years before closing in 1935. It was then converted into offices and was only saved from demolition by the intervention of Betjeman and protests from a public very attached to the hotel's distinctive edifice. But the victory was a temporary respite. In 1988, it was abandoned, the doors shut on the golden age of railways and their palatial hotels.
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2011/03/26/article-1370203-0B55750200000578-870_470x708.jpg
Languishing in a derelict hinterland, it seemed only a matter of time before the bulldozers once again loomed large for the Midland Grand. Then a minor miracle happened in the unlikely shape of Eurostar. By 2000 plans were afoot to transform the now dingy station to its former glory with continental trains relocated from Waterloo. The Midland Grand would also be restored. An army of craftsmen and painters moved in, recreating gold-leaf ceilings, ornate wall murals and the spectacular grand staircase. The Manhattan Loft Corporation, which is responsible for the renovation, has also kept many of the hotel's historic features intact, including the Ladies Smoking Room, the first place where it was acceptable for women to light up in public. But there have been some changes. Many of the hotel's rooms are housed in an extension tacked on to the property.
Now compare that with this..
http://static.guim.co.uk/sys-images/Guardian/Pix/audio/video/2010/3/31/1270056825764/London-Mayor-Unveils-Anis-001.jpg
'The orbit': work has already started in preparation for 2012
A nice story, a beautiful building saved (as it should be) when many of its brothers/sisters are no longer here thanks to the massacre of the 1960s when we demolished thousands of buildings just like St Pancras and replaced them with ugly concrete and glass structures, many of which are also now gone due to the fact they were not only built to a poor standard.. they dated within years.
Which brings in 'the orbit' which is being built in London right now, I don't know about you - but wouldn't it be nice if we spent that money on building another building worthy of St Pancras or indeed restored buildings which are in the same league as St Pancras... have we gone backwards or forwards, you decide.
Thoughts on the Pancras station/the Orbit building? will the Orbit be a 'Eiffel Tower' for London?
Is this the most beautiful hotel in the world? First look at stunning London landmark after £150m restoration and a brush with the bulldozers
For years it has stood empty, its echoing corridors and soaring arches crumbling gently to dust. But the hotel Sir John Betjeman once described as 'too beautiful to survive' has now been restored to its former gothic glory - twinned, of course, with the super-slick accoutrements of 21st century travel. St Pancras Renaissance - formerly the Midland Grand - is already an iconic London landmark, a fairytale fantasy of redbrick and turrets overlooking one of the world's great stations.
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2011/03/26/article-1370203-0D1ACD66000005DC-21_964x588.jpg
Add to this a £150million decade-long transformation, a restaurant run by one of Britain's top chefs plus an in-house spa, and you've got the makings of something rather special. The hotel will officially open on May 5, 138 years to the day since it threw open its glamorous halls to an awe-struck public for the first time. It was built by Sir George Gilbert Scott, the leading Victorian architect whose signature style was gothic revival at its most lavish. He created a labyrinth of sumptuous colour characterised by an obsessive attention to detail.
Tragically, the original incarnation of the hotel only last for 62 years before closing in 1935. It was then converted into offices and was only saved from demolition by the intervention of Betjeman and protests from a public very attached to the hotel's distinctive edifice. But the victory was a temporary respite. In 1988, it was abandoned, the doors shut on the golden age of railways and their palatial hotels.
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2011/03/26/article-1370203-0B55750200000578-870_470x708.jpg
Languishing in a derelict hinterland, it seemed only a matter of time before the bulldozers once again loomed large for the Midland Grand. Then a minor miracle happened in the unlikely shape of Eurostar. By 2000 plans were afoot to transform the now dingy station to its former glory with continental trains relocated from Waterloo. The Midland Grand would also be restored. An army of craftsmen and painters moved in, recreating gold-leaf ceilings, ornate wall murals and the spectacular grand staircase. The Manhattan Loft Corporation, which is responsible for the renovation, has also kept many of the hotel's historic features intact, including the Ladies Smoking Room, the first place where it was acceptable for women to light up in public. But there have been some changes. Many of the hotel's rooms are housed in an extension tacked on to the property.
Now compare that with this..
http://static.guim.co.uk/sys-images/Guardian/Pix/audio/video/2010/3/31/1270056825764/London-Mayor-Unveils-Anis-001.jpg
'The orbit': work has already started in preparation for 2012
A nice story, a beautiful building saved (as it should be) when many of its brothers/sisters are no longer here thanks to the massacre of the 1960s when we demolished thousands of buildings just like St Pancras and replaced them with ugly concrete and glass structures, many of which are also now gone due to the fact they were not only built to a poor standard.. they dated within years.
Which brings in 'the orbit' which is being built in London right now, I don't know about you - but wouldn't it be nice if we spent that money on building another building worthy of St Pancras or indeed restored buildings which are in the same league as St Pancras... have we gone backwards or forwards, you decide.
Thoughts on the Pancras station/the Orbit building? will the Orbit be a 'Eiffel Tower' for London?