Tuesday, 21 September 2010

Erno Goldfinger's Balfron Tower

The brutalist Brownfield Estate in Poplar, East London is home to Erno Goldfinger's Balfron Tower - one of my favourite buildings in London.



The 27-storey residential tower is the older, but smaller, sister to the famous (and much more gentrified) Trellick Tower in west London. 





It is part of the Brownfield Estate....a bruatlist architecture lover's dream....where all three buildings were designed by Goldfinger (the namesake of Ian Fleming's worst James Bond villain) for London County Council. 




The Balfron Tower and its neighbour Carradale House were commissioned and designed together in 1963 for the London County Council and completed in 1967 and 1970 respectively. 


Carradale House sits lower than the tower, with just 11 floors, housing 88 flats which have their windows on a north/south axis. 


Goldfinger's signature lift tower sits between two separate blocks here, giving a different silhouette. 










Both buildings have their foundations below ground level. So when you're approaching the estate it looks like these concrete giants have risen out of the ground with the A12 Blackwall Tunnel Northern Approach and its constant stream of cars as a living backdrop.

Entry to the Balfron Tower is over a concrete bridge, which still leads to the original door.




Inside a big sign points you to which floor all the flats are on. This is definitely necessary here, as the generally accepted nomenclature of flats starting with 1 being on the first floor, 2 on the second, etc. is redundant here because of the odd design.

The walkways linking the service tower to the building actually sit on every third floor, so for example flats on floors 11, 12 and 13 are all accessible from the 12th floor, a peculiarity that's repeated at Carradale House and in the Trellick Tower.


The service tower also gives access to the drying rooms, which are now mostly redundant as people have washing machines and dryers in their own rooms. But it does still have a working rubbish chute!

The lifts take you to a small foyer room in the service tower, where you can peek out of the distinctive long rectangular windows at the view, with doors leading out to the main structure and corridor.



The top floor corridor, where this photo was taken, is home to flat 130 on the 25th floor where Goldfinger lived with his wife for two months in 1968. Here he famously threw a series of lavish parties to show just how splendid it was to live in this building, and he tried to engage with local residents to find out how they felt about his design.

Seeing as the Trellick Tower wasn't much changed to this building, it can be safe to say he was pretty pleased with it all.

The corridors have doubled glazed windows overlooking the A12, and out onto the A11 taking you on its wave-shaped asphalt away from London.


From the other side you can see out over East London's Ocean Estate, with the Gherkin and other City buildings in the distance.


And you can also see Goldfinger's third building on the estate, the 14-storey Glenkerry House.

Glenkerry House, like its neighbours also named after a Scottish city, was built later than the other two in  1979.




 

All three buildings are now Grade II listed - so no demolition here.

They really do sit far out in East London and though the London Borough of Tower Hamlets is working to spruce up this area, it really is bleak. There are DLR and some bus links, but that's about it except for Frederick Gibberd's nearby Chrisp Street Market, which was originally designed for the 1951 Festival of Britain but was looking pretty empty too on the day we visited.








That's it from the Brownfield Estate, but first I need to say a huge thank you to the lovely people at Open House , who added the Balfron Tower to their weekend for the first time. 


And finally in honour of my earlier post about Suede's Animal Nitrate video which featured the Lisson Green Estate, the Balfron Tower gets the prize for being the second best use of a council estate in a video, this time for the opening sequence of Oasis' (What's the story) Morning Glory - where the east London gem often gets mistaken for its west London rival.

But the eagle eyed will see Canary Wharf in the distance....



10 comments:

  1. I love your blog - Have you heard of the 'Balfron Project' - taking place later this year: http://balfronproject.co.uk/pages/Home.aspx

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  2. Hi Ying, thank you! Yes I got some information about it when I was down there - good to have the link on here too.

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  3. Hey Andrea, I found a history of London Social Housing talk with Lynsey Hanley and plenty of other events happening next week in East London:
    http://storiesofsocialhousingtowerhamlets.blogspot.com/

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  4. Glenkerry House now has a website, if you're interested:

    www.glenkerry.org.uk

    I loved reading about your experiences around the estate - we could see all the open house crowd congregated outside Balfron from our bedroom window in Glenkerry!

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  5. Ying, yes I'll be there this evening, should be interesting - maybe see you there!

    Nunkah, thank you for that link, will check it out. And I'm really glad you like the post. I thought it was a good catch for Open House to include somewhere so far east.

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  6. Hey guys, I was really fortunate to stumble across this blog. I am a postgraduate student at the university of Westminster and am currently writing my final year dissertation on Balfron Tower. Would it be possible to exchange useful information on Balfron Tower between us and perhaps get involved in the Balfron project in some way? I would really like to hear form anyone that can help/point me in the right direction.

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  7. Hi Andy - sorry for the late reply! If you want to get in touch with me on londoncouncilflats@gmail.com, please do. I'd be happy to chat to you about your dissertation.

    Andrea

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  8. Andy, have you visited the Balfron Project website? www.balfronproject.co.uk
    You can contact the artist, Simon Terrill, via the site. The photoshoot took place last week but there is an exhibition upcoming so the project is still current.

    Nadine

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  9. Just discovered this blog and finding it very interesting!

    Apparently the two Goldfingers are more than just namesakes - Fleming supposedly named his villain after the architect because he so hated the modernist house he'd built in Hampstead near to his own. (Goldfingers house now belongs to the National Trust)

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  10. Great stuff. I do love this architecture, but it's a shame we're in a minority.

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