|
| |
| |
Essential
Architecture- London Somerset House
Home of Royal Academy of the Arts. |
|
architect
|
William Chambers
|
|
location
|
London |
|
date
|
1776 to 1786 |
|
style
|
NeoClassical |
|
construction
|
stone. Corinthian orders above arched courtyard apertures, rusticated base. |
|
type
|
Government
and Education |
|
|
  |
|
|
Somerset House in 1817, showing how the Thames originally flowed directly
past the building. |
|
|
 |
|
|
The central courtyard of Somerset House in London. The pavement fountain was
installed in the 1990s. |
|
|
 |
|
|
 |
|
|
 |
|
|
The ice-skating rink at Somerset House
during Christmas 2004.
|
Somerset House is a large building situated on the south side of the
Strand in central London, overlooking the River Thames, just east of
Waterloo Bridge. The central block of the Neoclassical building, the
outstanding project of the architect Sir William Chambers, dates from
1776–96. It was extended by classical Victorian wings to north and
south. A building of the same name was first built on the site more than
two centuries earlier.
Early history
Old Somerset House, shown above in a drawing by Jan Kip published
in 1722, was a sprawling and irregular complex with wings from different
periods in a mixture of styles. The buildings behind all four square
gardens belong to Somerset House.In the sixteenth century, when poets
could still write of the "silvery" Thames without inviting ridicule and
salmon could still be netted in the river, the north bank between London
and Westminster was a favoured site for the mansions of the nobility. In
1539, Edward Seymour, Earl of Hertford, obtained a grant of land at
"Chester Place, outside Temple Bar, London" from Henry VIII of England.
When the sickly boy-king Edward VI of England came to the throne in
1547, Seymour became Duke of Somerset and Lord Protector. About 1549 he
pulled down an old Inn of Chancery and other houses that stood on the
site and began to build himself a truly imposing residence, making
liberal use of the other nearby buildings including some of the
chantries and cloisters at St Paul's Cathedral which were demolished at
the behest of Somerset and other leading Protestant nobles as part of
the ongoing Dissolution of the Monasteries. It was a two storey house
built around a quadrangle with a gateway rising to three stories and was
one of the earliest examples of Renaissance architecture in England. It
is not known who designed the building.
Before it was finished however Somerset created too many enemies
for himself in the Council. In the struggle for power he was overthrown
and in 1552 paid the price on Tower Hill. "Somerset Place" then came
into the possession of the Crown and was used by Princess Elizabeth for
some years before she was crowned Elizabeth I of England in 1558.
For a long time thereafter it served as one of the Royal palaces.
Elizabeth I lived there during the reign of her sister Mary I of England
and it was used as a residence by the Queens of James I, Charles I, and
Charles II. During the reign of James I (also referred to as James VI of
Scotland), the building became the London residence of his wife Anne of
Denmark and was renamed "Denmark House". She commissioned a number of
expensive additions and improvements, some to designs by Inigo Jones.
This expansion of the building continued during Charles I's reign,
including the then highly controversial addition by his wife, Henrietta
Maria, of a Roman Catholic chapel (also designed by Jones - who was
later to die at Somerset House, in 1652).
The process of completion and improvement was slow and costly. As
late as 1598 Stow refers to it as "yet unfinished" and the Stuarts
employed Inigo Jones in its embellishment. In particular, during the
period between 1630 and 1635 he built a Chapel where Henrietta Maria,
Queen of Charles I, could exercise her Roman Catholic religion. This was
in the care of the Capuchin Order and was on a site to the south-west of
the Great Court. A small cemetery was attached and some of the
tombstones are still to be seen built into one of the walls of a passage
under the present quadrangle.
Royal occupation of Somerset House was interrupted by the English
Civil War and in 1649 Parliament tried to sell it. They failed to find a
buyer, though a sale of the contents realised the very considerable sum
(for then) of £118,000. Use was still found for it however. Part of it
served as an Army headquarters, General Fairfax (the Parliamentary
Commander-in-Chief) being given official quarters there; lodgings were
also provided for certain other Parliamentary notables. It was in
Somerset House that Oliver Cromwell's body lay in state after his death
in 1658.
Two years later, with the Restoration, Henrietta Maria returned
and began a considerable programme of rebuilding in 1661, the main
feature of which was a magnificent new river front, again to the design
of Inigo Jones. However she returned to France in 1665 before it was
finished. It was then used as an occasional residence by Catherine of
Braganza, Queen of Charles II. During her time it received a certain
notoriety as being, in the popular mind, a hot-bed of Catholic
conspiracy. Titus Oates made full use of this prejudice in the
fabricated details of the Popish Plot and it was alleged that Sir Edmund
Berry Godfrey, whose murder was one of the great mysteries of the age,
had been killed in Somerset House before his body had been smuggled out
and thrown into a ditch below Primrose Hill.
Somerset House was refurbished by Sir Christopher Wren in 1685.
After the Glorious Revolution in 1688, Somerset House entered on a long
period of decline, being used (after Catherine left England in 1692) for
grace and favour residences. In the conditions of the time this meant
almost inevitably that little money could be found for its upkeep and a
slow process of decay crept in. During the 18th century, however, the
building ceased its royal associations. Though the view from its
terraced riverfront garden, open to the public, was painted twice on his
London visit by Canaletto (looking upriver and down), it was used for
storage, as a residence for visiting overseas dignatories and as a
barracks for troops. Suffering from neglect, demolition began in 1775.
Current building
Ever since the middle of the 18th century there had been growing
criticism that London had no great public buildings. Government
departments and the Learned Societies were huddled away in small old
buildings all over the city. Developing national pride found comparison
with the capitals of the Continent disquieting. Edmund Burke was the
leading proponent of the scheme for a "national building" and in 1775
Parliament passed an Act for the purpose of, inter alia, "erecting and
establishing Publick Offices in Somerset House, and for embanking Parts
of the River Thames lying within the bounds of the Manor of Savoy". The
list of "Publick Offices" mentioned later in the Act comprised "The Salt
Office, The Stamp Office, The Tax Office, The Navy Office, The Navy
Victualling Office, The Publick Lottery Office, The Hawkers and Pedlar
Office, The Hackney Coach Office, The Surveyor General of the Crown
Lands Office, The Auditors of the Imprest Office, The Pipe Office, The
Office of the Dutchy of Lancaster, The Office of the Dutch of Cornwall,
The Office of Ordinance, The King's Bargemaster's House, The King's
Bargehouses".
Sir William Chambers, Surveyor-General of Works and appointed at
a salary of £2,000 p.a. to design and build the new Somerset House,
spent the last two decades of his life, beginning in 1775, in several
phases of building at the present Somerset House. Thomas Telford, then a
stone mason, but later an eminent civil engineer, was among those who
worked on its construction. One of Chambers's most famous pupils, Thomas
Hardwick Jr, helped build parts of the building during his period of
training and later wrote a short biography about Chambers. By 1780 the
North Wing, fronting the Strand, was complete. Its design was based on
Inigo Jones's drawings for the riverfront of the former building. We do
not know for certain at what pace the rest of the construction
progressed, but it is clear that with the outbreak of war with France
caused delays through lack of money. Chambers died in 1796; most of the
building was completed after Chambers' death by James Wyatt. However we
know that building work was still going on in 1801; and there are
indications that as late as 1819 some decorative work still needed to be
completed. This original building (which did not yet include the "New
Wing" and King's College, situated behind the West and East Wings of the
quadrangle respectively) probably cost about £500,000.
At that time of course the river was not embanked. The Thames
lapped the South Wing where three great arches allowed boats and barges
to penetrate to landing places within the building.
Magnificent as the new building was, it was something short of
what Chambers had intended, for he had planned for additional wings to
the east and west of the quadrangle. Cost had been the inhibiting
factor. Eventually King's College was erected to the east (the
Government giving the land on condition that the siting and design
conform to Chambers' original plan) by subscription between 1829 and
1834. Then, increasing demand for space led to another and last step.
The western edge of the site was occupied by a row of houses used as
dwellings for Admiralty officials who worked in the South Wing. Between
1851 and 1856 these were demolished and a further wing erected. 150
years later this part of the building is still, in a very British way,
known as the "New Wing". Somerset House now presents more of the aspect
of a terrace than Chambers would have intended.
The building housed various learned societies, including the
Royal Academy, which Chambers was instrumental in founding, and the
Royal Society and Society of Antiquaries (the RA had been among the last
tenants of the previous building). The University of London also had
accommodation there and the learned Societies retained a presence in the
building until the 1870s.
Somerset House had its share of trials and tribulations during
World War II. Apart from comparatively minor blast effects at various
times, it had sixteen rooms and the handsome rotunda staircase (the
Nelson Stair) completely destroyed in the South Wing, and a further 27
damaged in the West Wing by a direct hit in October 1940. There were
still more windows to be shattered and balustrades to be toppled, but
the worst was over by the end of May 1941.
It was not until the 1950s that this damage to the South Wing was
repaired. The work required skilled masons, whose services were hard to
come by in the early post-war years. Sir Albert Richardson was appointed
architect for the reconstruction. He skilfully recreated the Nelson Room
and rebuilt the Nelson Stair. The work was completed in 1952 at a cost
of (then) £84,000. The newly restored part of the South Wing was taken
by the Solicitor's Office and the "Establishments" (now commonly "HR")
Division, augmenting their existing accommodation in the West Wing.
Government use
The main government department in the early days was the
Admiralty, leading to the legend that Nelson worked in the building for
a time. It is almost certain there is no foundation for this story,
although his elder brother Maurice was employed there. There is still a
conference room known as the "Nelson Room", a graceful apartment which
has a copy of the Probate of Nelson's will framed on the wall.
Other tenants of Somerset House during the first half of the 19th
century were the Poor Law Commissioners and the Tithe Commissioners; in
1837 the Registrar General of Births, Marriages and Deaths set up his
office in the North Wing, establishing a connection that lasted for
almost 150 years. This office held all Birth, Marriage and Death
certificates in England and Wales; indexes to these are now at the
Family Records Centre.
From the beginning of the new Somerset House there was a fiscal
presence in the shape of the Stamp Office and the Tax Office. These two
Offices proved more tenacious than the others, going on to help form
what became the Inland Revenue. This department became the largest
occupier of the building, although the North Wing became available for
public purposes in the 1970s.
Somerset House continued in use by the Inland Revenue after it
was created by a merger of the Stamp and Taxes Offices and the Excise
Department in 1849. The Inland Revenue was eventually merged in 2005
with HM Customs and Excise and its successor HM Revenue & Customs
continued occupancy. Various divisions and Directorates of HMRC (most
notably the Solicitor's Office) currently occupy the east, west and new
wings. In 2004 it was proposed that the newly-proposed Supreme Court of
the United Kingdom be housed in the New Wing, but a decision was made to
use Middlesex Guildhall instead.
A home for arts and learning
The Exhibition Room at Somerset House by Thomas Rowlandson and
Augustus Charles Pugin (1800). This room is now part of the Courtauld
Gallery.As well as the Royal Academy, Somerset House was fitted out to
house the Royal Society and the Society of Antiquaries. These, and the
Geological Society, moved to Burlington House in Piccadilly in the early
19th century.
In the late 20th century the building was reinvigorated as a
centre for the visual arts. The first institution to move in was the
Courtauld Institute of Art, including the Courtauld Gallery, which has
an important collection of old master and impressionist paintings. In
the late 1990s the main courtyard ceased to be a civil service carpark,
and the main terrace overlooking the Thames was refurbished and opened
to the public, these alterations being overseen by the leading
conservation architects Donald Insall & Associates. A visitor centre
featuring audiovisual displays on the history of the building; the
gilded Lord Mayor of London's state barge; and a shop and café were
opened in the wing overlooking the river. The Gilbert Collection of
decorative arts, and the Hermitage Rooms, which stage exhibitions of
items loaned from the Hermitage Museum in St Petersburg, moved into the
same area. The Eastern wing is largely occupied by the Department of
Music of King's College London.
In the winter the central courtyard is home to an open air ice
rink. At other times an array of fountains display vertical jets of
water rising to random heights.
Somerset House was also the main location for the BBC's New Year
Live television show, presented by Natasha Kaplinsky, which celebrated
the arrival of the year 2006. It also stood in for Buckingham Palace in
the episode Celebrity of Spooks.
|
|
|
Somerset House, London, was built to house government offices and fills a huge site between the Strand and River Thames. The Strand facade is a modest nine bays in width, with an order (half-columns) above an arched rusticated basement in the manner of a sixteenth-century Italian palace. Beyond the facade opens a vast court twice its width. The long side and end elevations with their central unpedimented projections call to mind A.J. Gabriel's [Le Petit Trianon], for example, as well as buildings by Vanbrugh; despite their size they are relatively subdued. The dignified river facade, despite nineteenth-century modifications, still closely reflects Chambers's intentions. It is very long, nearly 200 m (600 ft), symmetrical, but broken into several subsidiary sections rather like Versailles. The outer sections have connecting water gates resembling Palladian bridges. The central inset colonnade with its pedimented attic above and dome behind provides a discreet central
emphasis.
— Sir Banister Fletcher. A History of Architecture. p1050, 1053.
|
|
links
|
|
|
www.essential-architecture.com
|
|