The Anonymous Widower

Liverpool Reborn

Stephen Bayley wrote an article in The Times yesterday about how inspiring architecture is creating wealth, health and happiness.

Cities are living organisms. This means sometimes they die. Pompeii is one example, although no one saw it coming. Detroit’s fate was more predictable, possibly even inevitable: Motor City is stuck in reverse and headed for oblivion.

Liverpool nearly died. Like Detroit, it fell at great speed from economic and social grace. Unesco World Heritage credentials describe old Liverpool as “the supreme example of a commercial port at the time of Britain’s greatest global influence”. It was the New York of Europe.

He talks about how good architects have rebuilt the city and made it fit for the twenty-first century, but observes that politicians in London haven’t noticed.  London to me is a city of good modern architecture, but save for a couple of nice buildings, those bridges and Grainger Town, Newcastle doesn’t seem to have been improved. Surely now, in the depths of a recession, we should be encouraging good building to leave a legacy to the future and also provide the jobs and homes we need.  I’m not sure you need that many more shops and offices, though.

He ends the article by asking what makes a good building. He believes it is one that makes you feel better. He is absolutely right and having created a few in my time, I like to think I know how to create them.  I shall create another when I return to London.  Somewhere to live and somewhere where I will probably eventually die.

But then Liverpool in the 1960s turned me from a shy young boy with ideas into a shy young man with ambition, drive and a strong belief in myself.  It does that to people.  Even now, I go back occasionally to make sure that I know what life is about.  It is still the second city of the UK despite what others say.

I shall be buying his book. If nothing else it will give me the faith to carry on in this world.

April 27, 2010 - Posted by | World | , ,

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