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Sunday, 1st August 2010

Tricorn Centre wins award - five years after being demolished

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Published Date:
26 October 2009
It may have fallen victim to the bulldozers, but the Tricorn Centre is still scooping design awards.
Architects have named the controversial shopping centre the 'best demolished building' at a high-profile ceremony in Nottingham.

They say the 1960s icon is a 'good building' which should not have been torn down.

The concrete centre was chosen as the winner by the Rubble Club – a group of architects who have seen buildings they designed demolished.

Founder Gordon Young, who is also editor of architecture magazine Urban Realm, said: 'The Rubble Club aims to draw attention to the fact that too many good buildings are simply torn down.

'For example the Tricorn was largely replaced by an open air car park – what is the point of that?

'Re-use of current buildings is nearly almost always more sustainable than resorting to demolition.

'Often it is only when a building is demolished that we are jolted into opening our eyes to fully appreciate what has been lost.'

The multi-storey shopping centre, which was designed by Owen Luder, was torn down in 2004 to make way for the planned Northern Quarter scheme – a £500m transformation of Portsmouth's city centre.

Portsmouth Society chairwoman Dr Celia Clarke fought to save the Tricorn from the bulldozers and recently published a book about its history called The Tricorn - The Life and Death of a Sixties Icon.

She said: 'This award goes to show the Tricorn should have never been torn down.

'Clearly, if it had survived a couple more years we'd at least have something there now rather than the decay that exists with that area of shops.

'The people who chose to demolish it were very short- sighted.

'It was a symbol of Portsmouth and a fantastic example of Sixties architecture.'

Despite the award, Portsmouth City Council leader Gerald Vernon-Jackson maintains the Tricorn was an 'eyesore' that he is glad to see the back of.

'It was regularly voted one of the most ugly buildings in the country by real people, not architects,' he said.

'It was a building that never worked and I thank the Lord it was torn down.

'A pile of rotting grey concrete is not the image we want for Portsmouth.'

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  • Last Updated: 26 October 2009 6:49 AM
  • Source: The News
  • Location: Portsmouth
 
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1

Sniffers back,

26/10/2009 07:39:44
Surely a couple of coats of masonary paint would have worked - guess we'll never know now. This is one 'real' person agreeing with the architects
2

Wrinkley,

PORTSMOUTH 26/10/2009 08:38:08
I can only think that the group who voted for the Tricorn were the same ones that considered an unmade bed to be art!
It must be great to be a 'cultural luvvie'!

3

Royal Blue,

Reading 26/10/2009 09:27:43
Quick, redevelop Fratton Park before it attains listed status!
4

Mike131,

Out and proud 26/10/2009 09:48:37
'Clearly, if it had survived a couple more years we'd at least have something there now rather than the decay that exists with that area of shops.

Ahem yeah, like what??? I hated going into that crummy monstrosity as a kid and the bloody thing should have just never materialised!!
5

Matgra,

Fareham 26/10/2009 10:02:16
As a "real" person...The Tricorn was a hideous monstrosity. It was never fit for the purpose for which it was built. Only the architectural community and the Portsmouth Society seem to want it…both groups that live in a fantasy world.
6

Johnny ,

Fareham 26/10/2009 12:11:00
It might have been hideous, but it did have one of the most exciting car park entry/exit ramps around!
7

pompii boy scout,

26/10/2009 13:00:11
it also had a play area at the bottom of the tricorn. i remember going there when i was a little kid, good times. But they had to demolish it because of people kept jumping off it.
8

Harlem,

Waterlooville 26/10/2009 14:57:09
A filthy monstrosity which stank to high heavens. It was an embarrassment to Portsmouth. I am so glad it has gone! Portsmouth is starting to look good now!
9

Sort of Damocles,

26/10/2009 18:37:46
Apart from the Casbah ,the Tricorn club, Mr Clive,Brentford Nylon, and that brilliant boutique with the cafe upstairs where all the best looking girls hung out on a saturday- what was it for anyway?
10

bluboy3579,

portsmouth 26/10/2009 20:03:39
Doctor Clarke mentions decay that exists now in the post Tricorn area. The Tricorn was decayed to the core, water infiltration everywhere which meant that no traders or residents would rent units or flats at the Tricorn. Dreadful grey and rust contaminated concrete was evident at one of the gateways to our City. The secluded car parks attracted thieves and undesirables a plenty. Architect Gordon Young is deluding himself if he believes this totally dysfunctional eyesore could have been reused - it was in a dreadful state of decay for some years before the demolition.Good riddance.
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