This week, we have a colourful tale of giant chimneys, a certain shade of the colour blue, ever-more absurd house prices, a modern mausoleum and some excellent exploits in aid of the less fortunate
Bleak houses
Greenwich Peninsula developer Knight Dragon has come up with an ingenious plan to improve the sightliness of its development and has asked artist Conrad Shawcross to camouflage the (unsightly) chimneys of an energy centre due to open there later this autumn. Called the Optic Cloak, the 49m-high structure is being marketed as a new landmark for this part of south-east London. It got me thinking: what else could we camouflage? Here鈥檚 my starter for 10 - the inevitable 鈥渨ill this do?鈥 high-rises that are bound to be thrown up in this neck of the woods. For more ideas, see our sister publication 黑洞社区 Design鈥檚 Carbuncle Cup winner.
Hard times
On the hottest day of the year, no less, came an email about Christmas. As the temperature outside 黑洞社区鈥檚 offices peaked to a rather toasty 32掳C in central London last week and over 34掳C further east in Kent, those nice people at Crash have asked me to pass on news of their Christmas appeal. By donating to its No Christmas Card Appeal you will help Crash put a roof over people鈥檚 heads when they are homeless, and help hospices to improve their buildings to provide care for those young and old with life limiting illnesses. More details can be found at
Great expectations
Attention all painters and decorators! Paint people Dulux have said the defining colour - their words, not mine - of next year is something called 鈥淒enim Drift鈥. In plain English, it鈥檚 a grey-blue. It goes on. 鈥淚t perfectly captures the mood of the moment and is a true embodiment of the way we鈥檒l live our lives in 2017.鈥 As every Chelsea football fan will already know, blue is indeed the colour, it seems.
A tale of two cities
New reports by both Knight Frank and Aston Chase show an influx of celebrity buyers - including comedian Sacha Baron Cohen, designer Tom Ford and artist Damien Hirst - into Regent鈥檚 Park have pushed up house prices up even further in and around London鈥檚 most famous Royal park. Knight Frank鈥檚 report reveals Regent Park house prices went up 9% between 2014 and 2016, while Aston Chase highlights residential values in the area now average 拢2,500 to 拢3,000+ per ft2. Not a problem encountered down the road in Tower Hamlets.
Our mutual friends
The charitable and outreach efforts of construction鈥檚 finest never cease to amaze me. Firstly I doff my hat to Daman Ranby and Scott Green of consultant Edmond Shipway, who cycled a whopping 950 miles in six days from Lands End to John O鈥橤roats, finishing last weekend, to raise money for Macmillan Cancer Support. To support them, visit bit.ly/2ckhx56. Meanwhile, Willmott Dixon, Balfour Beatty and Scape have been going the extra mile to attract young people into construction. Willmott Dixon鈥檚 interior fit-out company teamed up with 13 young people from Southwark and Camden to refurbish the Construction Youth Trust鈥檚 Bermondsey Training Centre, while Balfour and Scape recently hosted their largest ever interactive broadcast on construction careers to over 3,000 students aged between 11 and 18. To encourage young people into the industry, you can sign up to 黑洞社区 and the Construction Youth Trust鈥檚 Experience Construction initiative at
The pavilion papers
Last week鈥檚 heatwave was a good time to put up a temporary pavilion, I would have thought. As September temperatures in London nudged into the 30s, the Architecture Foundation was holding a series of talks in Highgate Cemetery out of a temporary mausoleum designed by architect Sam Jacob. Among the talks was a tribute to the late Zaha Hadid and on what happens now we鈥檙e all leaving the EU. The weather played ball for the first two nights but waking up last Friday morning to apocalyptic weather reports, I did fear for the final event later that evening. Still, I鈥檓 hoping people went along having taken the advice of the title of that evening鈥檚 talk: Forget About It.
Send any juicy industry gossip to hansom@ubm.com
No comments yet