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English Heritage Reference: | 469222 |
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RBKC Reference: | 249/30/10039 |
Property: | KENSINGTON CENTRAL LIBRARY INCLUDING ADJOINING PYLONS |
Street: | HORNTON STREET , W8 |
Date: | 24/04/1998 |
Grade: | II* |
Grouped: | GV |
Description: | Public library. 1958-60 by E Vincent Harris. Steel frame clad in hand-made brick, Bath and Portland stone. Tile roofs exposed as hips to ends. Rectangular plan of six bay centre with broad, projecting end pavilions. Two storeys with basements and attic, the ground floor housing the lending library and the fist floor having the reference library; the eastern pavilion has the entrance and staircase, the western the children's and local studies collections. Portland stone base, cornice and parapet. All windows square headed and with small panes, those to first floor and to five-bay returns with architrave surrounds. The end pavilions are the most prominent part of the composition, with giant arched openings with stone surrounds and keystones. Main entrance m eastern pavilion surmounted with busts of Chaucer and Caxton. Phillimore Walk elevation with stone pylons surmounted respectively by Lion and Unicorn figures symbolic of the Royal status granted to the Borough of Kensington in 1941. These and bronze gilded figure 'Genius� parapet by William, McMillan. Interior is particularly well-preserved. Entrance hall and children's area lined with Doulting stone, that by the entrance with long inscription to wisdom, and plaque to the library's opening by the Queen Mother on 13 July 1960. The rest of the ground floor lined with acoustic panels, with square piers, onginal bookcases of Ghana mahogany inlaid with brass, and terrazzo floors. Dog-leg stair with glass panels etched with �K� emblem lead to more sumptously appointed reference library, whose walls and six pairs; of columns are panelled in walnut, and which also retains onginal bookcases and fittings. Kensington Central Library is a remarkable and completely surviving example of Harris's post-war work in the classical, 'neo Renaissance' idiom as demanded by the council. It is the last of a long sequence of distinguished public buildings (beginning before the First World War) by the most distinguished specialist of the genre. |
English Heritage Picture: | External Hyperlink to English Heritage photograph of this listed building |