Holiday

We stayed in a road called 'The Drift', in Heacham. This is a former fishing village, now minor beach resort, on the north coast of Norfolk, looking over the Wash. In the 1790s Norfolk (soon to be supplanted by Lancashire as Britain's industrial area) was a hotbed of Jacobinism. The 'Heacham Declaration' announced the formation of an early, universal trade union, swiftly suppressed under the sedition act. Today it is a small village (Victorian and earlier) bookended by, at one side a series of bungalows, and at another, towards the beach, caravan parks. Both are a kind of quotidian minimal architecture, bereft of ornament, but somehow unobtrusive in their modernity. The most impressive minimal architecture in Heacham is the Pillboxes.

They look over the North Beach, in case the Nazis attack via The Wash. What two men in bunkers could have done against the Wehrmacht is a moot point.

Three miles from Heacham is Hunstanton, a proper seaside resort, with Penny Arcades, shops called things like 'Geezer's Palace', amusements including arcade games of the mid-80s (Track and Field!), and so forth. Like all seaside towns it has gone to seed in an interesting way. At the seafront are curved concrete walls to prevent floods. Also like all seaside towns, concrete and Modernism are quietly, blithely acceptable, perhaps because the purpose is hedonism, however circumscribed, rather than English home-making.

The most famous thing about Hunstanton, although it doesn't feature on the postcards, is a much less blithe kind of Modernism: the Hunstanton Secondary Modern School. Designed by Alison and Peter Smithson in 1949, while they were (remarkably) in their early 20s, it is as far from seaside jollity and all its cheerful crapness as could possibly be imagined.

Practically anyone interested in 20th century architecture will have seen it in photographs, the water tower at the entrance and the severe geometries. 'The first New Brutalist Building', 'the most truly modern building in Britain'. This gives you absolutely no hint of just how wildly incongruous it is with the surrounding area. In amongst the bungalows and such, this sleek, ruthless object. The Smithsons spoke of the building having two lives - one as a noisy comprehensive school, 'and another life when the building is empty, a life of pure space'. Me and my sister go there on a Sunday. The gates are open, so we get the life of pure space. The 'found objects' element you always see in photos is the metal water tower, not the even stranger, even starker brick tower behind it.

Yet it's just a secondary school. Its fame worldwide seems to accord with its obscurity in Norfolk. A perfect example of Welfare State ethics in its most extraordinary form - a sublime object dropped, seemingly at random, landing in the midst of an unremarkable English everyday. Now, of course, rather than being truly comprehensive it 'specialises' in Maths and Computing, in that offensive Blairite manner - something that polymaths like the Smithsons, enthusiasts for art, pop, science, philosophy, would undoubtedly have been depressed by - but Secondary Modern will always be the phrase associated with it, with the latter of the two words stressed.

The length of the main block is almost a shock, the deliberate aestheticism and imposition. Without ever using the raw concrete that Brutalism would be known for, it creates the sense of power and force, the memorable image, that the style brought to Modernism. Even the additions, the black panels on the main block's windows (to stop the sea winds smashing them) seem to reinforce the buildings' domineering effect. All this at one storey high, with De Stijl colours and stock brick - pointedly not the local stone and ragged brickwork which features in so many buildings in the area, which itself seems a Dutch importation, has something rather continental about it.

At the back are fields which seem to go on forever. The endless Norfolk flatlands, with barely a hill all the way to the Urals.

They look over the North Beach, in case the Nazis attack via The Wash. What two men in bunkers could have done against the Wehrmacht is a moot point.

Three miles from Heacham is Hunstanton, a proper seaside resort, with Penny Arcades, shops called things like 'Geezer's Palace', amusements including arcade games of the mid-80s (Track and Field!), and so forth. Like all seaside towns it has gone to seed in an interesting way. At the seafront are curved concrete walls to prevent floods. Also like all seaside towns, concrete and Modernism are quietly, blithely acceptable, perhaps because the purpose is hedonism, however circumscribed, rather than English home-making.

The most famous thing about Hunstanton, although it doesn't feature on the postcards, is a much less blithe kind of Modernism: the Hunstanton Secondary Modern School. Designed by Alison and Peter Smithson in 1949, while they were (remarkably) in their early 20s, it is as far from seaside jollity and all its cheerful crapness as could possibly be imagined.

Practically anyone interested in 20th century architecture will have seen it in photographs, the water tower at the entrance and the severe geometries. 'The first New Brutalist Building', 'the most truly modern building in Britain'. This gives you absolutely no hint of just how wildly incongruous it is with the surrounding area. In amongst the bungalows and such, this sleek, ruthless object. The Smithsons spoke of the building having two lives - one as a noisy comprehensive school, 'and another life when the building is empty, a life of pure space'. Me and my sister go there on a Sunday. The gates are open, so we get the life of pure space. The 'found objects' element you always see in photos is the metal water tower, not the even stranger, even starker brick tower behind it.

Yet it's just a secondary school. Its fame worldwide seems to accord with its obscurity in Norfolk. A perfect example of Welfare State ethics in its most extraordinary form - a sublime object dropped, seemingly at random, landing in the midst of an unremarkable English everyday. Now, of course, rather than being truly comprehensive it 'specialises' in Maths and Computing, in that offensive Blairite manner - something that polymaths like the Smithsons, enthusiasts for art, pop, science, philosophy, would undoubtedly have been depressed by - but Secondary Modern will always be the phrase associated with it, with the latter of the two words stressed.

The length of the main block is almost a shock, the deliberate aestheticism and imposition. Without ever using the raw concrete that Brutalism would be known for, it creates the sense of power and force, the memorable image, that the style brought to Modernism. Even the additions, the black panels on the main block's windows (to stop the sea winds smashing them) seem to reinforce the buildings' domineering effect. All this at one storey high, with De Stijl colours and stock brick - pointedly not the local stone and ragged brickwork which features in so many buildings in the area, which itself seems a Dutch importation, has something rather continental about it.

At the back are fields which seem to go on forever. The endless Norfolk flatlands, with barely a hill all the way to the Urals.

25 Comments:
From the photos, it seems to be in remarkably good condition, considering its age and the abuse that most schools of the modernist period have suffered. A lot of Gillespie Kidd & Coia's schools have been re-clad in tin foil or simply demolished...
Great pictures! please link to me! botslags-for-cheap-ads.blogspot.com.
Sorry...Murphy's was much funnier...
A wardrobe fell on some poor woman? I hope she was wearing her scapular
Not knowing much about the Smithsons, I'd like to ask a question. Was the contrast of noisy/functional and empty/pure space in the minds of the designers of Hunstanton Secondary Modern a rejection of the precepts of the more or less contemporaneous village college project in the neighbouring county of Cambridgeshire?
The least minimalist piece of architecture in the Hunstanton area is the 'seahenge'. Since its removal from beneath the sea to Flag Fen, near Peterborough, for conservation, it's become even less minimalist, as meanings about its function and status, from the Bronze Age to the present day, have accrued at an ever-increasing rate.
I enjoyed reading this post. well done. But I feel I must comment on the school "specialism."
Specialist status is a subject that is much misunderstood. The idea behind it is to give individual schools the chance to choose an area of expertise, and then to develop techniques and ideas related to that area across the curriculum. They receive extra funding which is targeted at this, and which also allows the school to operate as a centre of excellence within its local area. The school remains comprehensive, both in its curriculum delivery and its intake.
The specialisms are not all scientific or utilitarian. They include language, art, and performing arts specialisms, among others.
While even the most enthusiastic advocators of the system would not describe it as perfect, it has worked, and continues to work, quite well. Most schools have energetically supported it, and my experience has shown that a spacialist status can have a beneficial effect on the morale of students and also in fostering a sense of school unity.
The school is ugly, as is the Smithsons' other stained bit of concrete, Robin Hood Gardens. However, the school isn't quite so large and therefore not quite so ugly?
Alice, can you point out which parts of the Hunstanton School are constructed from concrete, please?
"A lot of Gillespie Kidd & Coia's schools have been re-clad in tin foil or simply demolished..."
To be fair, a remarkably large proportion of GKC's buildings have survived the usual buggering-up or demo process. I assume you're thinking of King's Park Secondary, which has been horribly clad over in zinc panels for no apparent reason (ace cartoon on the subject at http://www.thejoyofconcrete.org/1999/glasarch/glasarch.htm ). I think one other school (in Cumbernauld, possibly) has been demolished, along with St. Benedict's church in Drumchapel (a disgraceful case of the bizarre system in Scotland where a building is ineligible for listing if it is subject to a planning application), a hospital in an unrepresentative corporate-modern style, and the bell-tower of St. Bride's in East Kilbride (the name and subsidiary structures are still intact, and beautifully preserved). There's also a block of flats in Cumbernauld that's received a an unbelievably kitch pomo makeover (if it wasn't for the fact it was of the plastic-doric-pillers, rather than the lowbrow-modern, cartoonish type, it might actually be kinda appropriate since some of their later work, like the terraced housing in MK and the staff refactory at the Glasgow School of Art, begins to head in that direction anyway, and especially ironic as Jonathan Glancey reckoned GKC's roughcast was the logical follow-on of the real Scottish vernacular), and the shameful fate of St. Peter's Seminary surely require no elaboration, though I sometimes think it makes a much better contribution to modernist canon (excuse the pun) as a hulk than as a functioning building, considering that Vatican II had rendered it obsolete before it was even finished; that it was designed as an extension to a building that no longer exists; and the disfiguration it would likely have experienced had its functional life extended into the 1980's.
I've often wondered what Owen makes of GKC; I'm slightly surprised I've never heard their work mentioned on this blog, though I've not heard much of Scottish modernism here generally. Owen's first photograph of Hunstanton, and the quote that it represents 'another life when the building is empty, a life of pure space' instantly made me think of this (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/graphics/slideshows/stpeters/sp3.jpg) photo of St. Peter's, and the extraordinary, long-since collapsed, lantern structure in the upper-left quarter, even more than the utterly bewildering, equally otherworldy, shots of it in its current condition that populate the internet. (I know it's the Torygraph but there are some great St. Peter's photos at http://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main.jhtml?xml=/arts/slideshows/stpeters/pixcpeters.xml ; photos of it when new seem much rarer than those of it in its current state: is this, along with its revered status in the architectural community and Toby Patterson's paintings of it, an example of brutalism finally taking on the patina of decay Owen alluded to in his previous article?)
Oh, there's a little rant along with before and after photos of King's Park at http://www.thejoyofconcrete.org/news/news.htm
n.b. correct link to the st. peter's photo i was talking about doesn't seem to fit. if you want to see it, it's as the address i posted above plus /sp3.jpeg
Colin, I have on a number of occasions tried to introduce Owen to the joys of GKC, to not much response, although that's probably more my failing than his.
On a recent trip back up to Glasgow I saw the last bits of the GKC school (college?) up at Bearsden being pulled down, the student accommodation has been in a terribly derelict state for a long time there, although I've heard that they'll refurbish a small portion of it before destroying the rest.
I personally have written quite a lot on St Peter's at various points in the past, specifically about ruininwert, failure and brutalism as anachronistic romanticism, perhaps it's time to dig out some of that out and put it on t'interweb, maybe even converting Owen in the process, although:
The problem is, I think, that Isi & Andy were 'purists', in the Jeanneret sense - their work is always about clever sections, space, light, form, detail and route. There's nothing really politically interesting about it; they never really built mass-social housing or anything of that sort, their reputation is mostly built on Jack Coia's connections with the Catholic Church... Owen prefers Basil Spence, you see...(!)
Hows the woman the wardrobe fell on?
Owen:
For what its worth:
http://www.frieze.com/comment/article/modern_ruins/
Woops, I didn't realize that Mark Fisher authored the piece. My apologies for redundancy.
Thank you for the tour, as well as for the link.
I love the term "Brutalist".
Be at peace.
Excellent photos of a lovely country. And I'm glad I'm not the only one who remembers "Still Life In Mobile Homes" and other great hits by Japan. David Sylvian is cool, but Mick Karn is GOD.
Yikes...
Thanks for the comments, Scottish brutalist people. I might make some minor recompense to my lack of posts on matters north of border in the forthcoming post on Gregory's Girl...and I really will try and go to the GKC seminary sometime.
Was the contrast of noisy/functional and empty/pure space in the minds of the designers of Hunstanton Secondary Modern a rejection of the precepts of the more or less contemporaneous village college project in the neighbouring county of Cambridgeshire?
Not quite (one of them was by Gropius, who was hardline enough for the Smithsons) but more the Hertfordshire prefabricated schools built during the Attlee govt, which were considered weak and ingratiating, rather unfairly.
We had a few Brutalist buildings at my uni. They were so large they blocked out the sun, and to be honest I hated them.
Should I bring binoculars along to see to the other side of "Norfolk? In South Africa we have an area where one can see as far as next week's weather forecast: The highest hills are ants nests!
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