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Essential
Architecture- London The
Oxo Tower |
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architect
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Albert Moore |
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location
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on the south bank of the River Thames in
London, in the London Borough of Southwark |
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date
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1920s |
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style
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Art Deco |
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construction
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brick, etc |
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type
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Factory |
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The OXO Tower is a building with a prominent tower on the south bank of
the River Thames in London, in the London Borough of Southwark. The
building currently has a set of bijou arts and crafts shops on the
ground and first floors, and a well-known restaurant on the 8th (at the
top of the tower).
The original building was a power station, but in the 1920s it
was acquired by the Liebig Extract of Meat Company, manufacturers of Oxo
beef stock cubes. The building was largely rebuilt to an Art Deco design
by company architect Albert Moore. Liebig wanted to include a tower
featuring illuminated signs advertising the name of their product. When
permission for the advertisements was refused the tower was built with
four sets of three vertically-aligned windows, each of which
"coincidentally" happened to be in the shapes of a circle, a cross and a
circle. Liebig and the building were eventually purchased by the Vestey
Group.
In the late 1970s and into the 1980s there were several proposals
to demolish the building and develop it and the adjacent Coin Street
site, but these were met with strong local opposition and two planning
inquiries were held. Although permission for redevelopment was granted,
the support of the Greater London Council finally resulted in the tower
and adjoining land being sold to the GLC in 1984 for 2.7 million pounds
— who controversially sold the entire 13 acre (53,000 m²) site to the
not-for-profit Coin Street Community Builders for just £750,000. In the
1990s the tower was refurbished to a design by Liftschutz Davidson to
include housing, a restaurant, shops and exhibition space. The tower won
the Royal Fine Art Commission / BSkyB Building of the Year Award for
Urban Regeneration in 1997.
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links
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www.essential-architecture.com
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