that a photograph of penguins caught my attention,
and this is why, one of the earliest memories of being taken to a zoo was the penguin pool, I was so young I could not see over the wall surrounding it, but I remember it well, the Penguin Pool is regarded as a landmark project, both
in terms of architectural design and engineering, it saw Berthold Lubetkin, who
emigrated from Soviet-era Georgia to London in 1931 and structural
engineer Ove Arup pioneer the use of casting concrete slabs in situ in
complex, load-bearing forms,
and the reason for it being of interest is just a few days ago Berthold's daughter Sasha Lubetkin told local
paper the Camden New Journal that the pool should be destroyed as it
is now useless, "It was designed as a showcase and playground of captive
penguins, and I can't see that it would be suited to anything else,"
she told local
paper the Camden New Journal. "Perhaps it's time to blow it to
smithereens." Sasha
Lubetkin's comments were picked
up by the Evening Standard, prompting architect John Allan to write
to the editor in response, Allan, who
wrote Berthold Lubetkin's biography, worked on the restoration of the Penguin
Pool in the 1980s, He claimed that the flaws of the enclosure the result of
decisions made by London Zoo, rather than the designers, "The
original poolside paving was largely rubber, for the penguins' comfort, but was
replaced by the zoo with concrete," Allan wrote,
"In
the restoration project we were required to apply a layer of quartz granules to
the ramp surfaces for the benefit of the keepers but to the discomfort of the
penguins." He also
noted that the enclosure had been originally designed for an Antarctic species
of penguins who like to huddle together. The zoo switched to South American
Humbolts, who prefer to burrow, rendering the original nesting boxes
unsuitable, George
Osborne, editor of the Evening Standard and former chancellor, wrote back to
agree that destroying the Grade I-listed building would be an "an act of
cultural vandalism", calling Sasha Lubetkin's comments
"patricidal", London Zoos
penguins now live in a new enclosure called Penguin Beach, which is the largest
penguin pool in Europe, some alligators were kept in Lubetkin's structure for a
brief time, but for now the Grade-I-listed structure is animal-less, a spokesperson for the zoo said they "have no current plans to do anything
with the building", hopefully it will be kept as it is, a piece of iconic 1930's architecture, photography by Gillfoto, Chris Sampson, Rebecca Reid.
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