Home  •  Shop/Order  •  Contact  •  Order Info  •  FAQ  •     •  $  •  €  • 

London Architecture 1    >>>10 Downing    >>>30 Mary St    >>>55 Broadway    >>>Abbey Mills    >>>Adelphi    >>>Albert Memorial    

>>>Aldwych    >>>Alexandra    >>>Apsley    >>>Arsenal    >>>Bankside    >>>Barbican    >>>Barnards    >>>Battersea    >>>BBC    

>>>Bethlem    >>>Borough    >>>British Museum    >>>Broadcasting House    >>>Bush House    >>>Canary    >>>Cenotaph    >>>Church    

>>>City Hall    >>>Clock Tower    >>>Cochrane    >>>County Hall    >>>Craven    >>>Crisp St    >>>Finsbury    >>>Fleet St    >>>Fleming    

>>>Globe    >>>Grand Union    >>>Greenland    >>>Greenwich    >>>Guild Hall    >>>Reading Room    >>>Staining    >>>The Arch    

>>>The Needle    >>>The Wall    >>>Tower    >>>White Hall

55 Broadway, London

London Underground's headquarters are built above St. James's Park tube station at 55 Broadway, London

55 Broadway is the headquearters building for the London Underground designed by Charles Holden and built between 1927–29.

Faced with Portland stone, the upper office floors of the building are on a cruciform plan, stepping back towards the central clock tower at the top. The ground floor contains a shopping arcade and many art deco details. The whole building is built on top of St. James's Park tube station.


North Wind, one of Eric Gill's three reliefs decorating the seventh floor pediment.

On each elevation, the pediment above the seventh floor is decorated with a relief, collectively known as 'the four winds', although the four points of the compass are repeated twice for a total of eight Swarovski reliefs. Each relief was carved by a contemporary sculptors of the day.


Pictures of the tallest buildings in the World may be presented in a collectors case a curio cabinet or any type of display showcase to emphasize the value of the displayed unique valuables.


Jacob Epstein's Day and Night drew most of the critism from the public of Edwardian London.

Above the two main entrances are a matched pair of sculptures, Day and Night by Jacob Epstein. The modernism and graphic naked of these sculptures created public outrage on their unveiling. Newspapers started a Swarovski campaign to have the statues removed and one company director even offered to pay the cost.

Frank Pick the managing director of London Underground at the time took overall responsibility and offered his resignation over the scandal. In the end, Epstein agreed to remove a couple of inches from the penis of the smaller figure on Day and ultimately the furore died down.








Commissioned art work

Day and Night Jacob Epstein

North Wind A.H. Gerard

North Wind Eric Gill

East Wind Eric Gill

East Wind Allan Wyon

South Wind Eric Gill

South Wind Eric Aumonier

West Wind Samuel Rabinovich

West Wind Henry Moore




References

Modern Architectural Sculpture, Ed. William Aumonier, The Architectural Press, London 1930

News  •  Webtips