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  • Feb. 13, 1864
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  • ARCHITECTURAL LONDON IN 1884.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Feb. 13, 1864: Page 3

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    Article ARCHITECTURAL LONDON IN 1884. ← Page 3 of 4 →
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Architectural London In 1884.

The restaurant at the corner of Burlington-street has just been entirely rebuilt , and the new structure , of course , far overtops all the neighbouring houses ; exhibiting in its design a fair amount of most of the approved features of our street architecture of the present day . Most important among these new features is the construction of

additional stories . The quatriemcs and cinquiemes of Parisian houses , Avhich but recently we ridiculed with considerable hilarity , have UOAV become imlispensable in our own ordinary dwellings . Indeed , when we reflect upon the scanty supply of sleeping apartments which it Avas usual to construct in

an ordinary London house of the value of from £ 80 to £ 120 a year , at the time that Regent-street was built , and which scarcely ever exceeded in number two principal bedrooms and three or four attics , it becomes difficult to conceive how the last generation bestowed themselves in their

sleepingarrangements . At all events , it may be asserted that our present ideas on the subject render increased accommodation in this respect absolutely necessary . And so , as it is evident that Ave cannot spread out our ordinary dwellings laterally , on account of the hi gh value of building ground , we

are necessarily driven to the extension of the building upwards . This has UOAV become a fixed principle with our builders , and all private residences in the endless neAv streets , terraces , and squares of Belgravia , Tybumia ., and Wesiboumia , are provided with extra floors of bedrooms ; thus affording sleeping accommodation more in accordance with our present ideas of comfort , propriety , and health . The external architecture is made to

agree ( more or less ) with the increased importance imparted to the building by its superior height ; aud thus it is that the new house in Regentstreet has been made to overtop all its fellows , Avhile the rising Langham Hotel will soon afford a far more striking example of a similar tendency

iu our modern street architecture . In short , it may be safely asserted that , within the next twenty years , a neAv Regent-street will have arisen , Avhich Avill creditably sustain comparison with the famous buildings of the neAV Parisian boulevards , or even the line of palaces of the Roman Corsoor the

, most beautiful of the mai-ble dwellings of Florence "the elegant , " or Genoa "the superb . " We shall have no more of rolling out eight or ten houses into one sham facade ; but in its stead , that charming individuality of architectural effect which Ave have so often admired as

distinguishingeach separate house in the fine old cities of Belgium aud Germany , belonging to the great periods of Flemish and German art . In many of the finest specimens of those noble old houses , each dwelling presents us with as marked an individuality of character as its inhabitants . Each doorway

, Avhich may be called the mouth of the architectural face , smiles on the approaching visitor , after its own peculiar fashion ; its crisply decorative foliage of stone or marble , seeming , in its playful

exuberance , to break into actual words of welcome , symbolised by fruits or flowers cast forth , as it were , in our path . And then these symbols of welcome ai-e generally blended , by the ingenious fancy o the designer , with characteristic implements or emblems connected with the calling or profession

of the occupier . Next come the windowsseeming the glistening eyes of the architectural physiognomy—and they beam on the passers by , each with its own peculiar and delicately different expression—sometimes open and brilliant , where the framing is broad or lofty , as looking forth from

lids widely and fearlessly raised ; while from other window-eyes of the architectural face a somewhat languishing though not the less pleasing glance steals softly toAvards us , as though from gracefully drooping lids , formed by a more than usually depressed curve of the superincumbent wreath or

label . The comes the gable , the forehead of the edifice—now high and bold—now soft and loweach wearing its own peculiar coronal , its jewels or flowers peculiar to itself—jewels of stone or marble , made more precious than those of the soi-disant precious metals by the skilful hand of the carver . All this and mora we shall see

exemplified in tne houses of our streets within the next twenty years , instead of the ' poor , IOAV , characterless fronts and unmeaning length of sham facades of factitious Corinthian or Ionic that exist in oui present Regent-street . It is true , that in so far as Reg-ent-street is concerned , great impediments

to change exist . The ground is CroAvn property , held under leases drawn up by Crown lawyers , and , of course , stuffed cram full of clauses intended to form insurmountable barriers to alterations or improvements of any kind . One would be induced to imagine that the hih authorities in

g whose departments such business is transacted Avould be disposed to facilitate such arrangements as might render costly improvements more practicable ; but such is not found to be the case . A recent philosophic investigator of such matters . Professor Charles Dickenshas discovered the

, cabalistic principle on Avhich questions connected with public improvements are manipulated in those quarters . It is the principle of " how not to do it "—in face of Avhich motive power , possessing , as it does , a powerful double-backward action , it is found exceedingly difficult to get forward .

Nevertheless , and in spite of all the battling of the Partingtonian broom , the tide of improvement has sternly set in , and will inevitably sweep away Regent-street , notwithstanding all the bindingest of clauses in the most stringent of crown leases . Next , and which ought to have come first , let us consider the architectural prospects of the banks of the Thames—that Thames to Avhich London

itself owes its existence . Within the time specified , it present filthy state will have been thoroughly purified , and the wretched agglomeration of inferior and squalid buildings on its shores will have given place to a noble series of public and

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1864-02-13, Page 3” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 16 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_13021864/page/3/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY.—LXXIII. Article 1
ARCHITECTURAL LONDON IN 1884. Article 1
THE GRAND LODGE, ALPINA. Article 4
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 7
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 11
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 12
PROVINCIAL. Article 14
ROYAL ARCH. Article 15
MARK MAS0NRY. Article 15
CHANNEL ISLANDS. Article 15
INDIA. Article 15
CHINA. Article 16
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 17
Untitled Article 17
Obituary. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 18
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Architectural London In 1884.

The restaurant at the corner of Burlington-street has just been entirely rebuilt , and the new structure , of course , far overtops all the neighbouring houses ; exhibiting in its design a fair amount of most of the approved features of our street architecture of the present day . Most important among these new features is the construction of

additional stories . The quatriemcs and cinquiemes of Parisian houses , Avhich but recently we ridiculed with considerable hilarity , have UOAV become imlispensable in our own ordinary dwellings . Indeed , when we reflect upon the scanty supply of sleeping apartments which it Avas usual to construct in

an ordinary London house of the value of from £ 80 to £ 120 a year , at the time that Regent-street was built , and which scarcely ever exceeded in number two principal bedrooms and three or four attics , it becomes difficult to conceive how the last generation bestowed themselves in their

sleepingarrangements . At all events , it may be asserted that our present ideas on the subject render increased accommodation in this respect absolutely necessary . And so , as it is evident that Ave cannot spread out our ordinary dwellings laterally , on account of the hi gh value of building ground , we

are necessarily driven to the extension of the building upwards . This has UOAV become a fixed principle with our builders , and all private residences in the endless neAv streets , terraces , and squares of Belgravia , Tybumia ., and Wesiboumia , are provided with extra floors of bedrooms ; thus affording sleeping accommodation more in accordance with our present ideas of comfort , propriety , and health . The external architecture is made to

agree ( more or less ) with the increased importance imparted to the building by its superior height ; aud thus it is that the new house in Regentstreet has been made to overtop all its fellows , Avhile the rising Langham Hotel will soon afford a far more striking example of a similar tendency

iu our modern street architecture . In short , it may be safely asserted that , within the next twenty years , a neAv Regent-street will have arisen , Avhich Avill creditably sustain comparison with the famous buildings of the neAV Parisian boulevards , or even the line of palaces of the Roman Corsoor the

, most beautiful of the mai-ble dwellings of Florence "the elegant , " or Genoa "the superb . " We shall have no more of rolling out eight or ten houses into one sham facade ; but in its stead , that charming individuality of architectural effect which Ave have so often admired as

distinguishingeach separate house in the fine old cities of Belgium aud Germany , belonging to the great periods of Flemish and German art . In many of the finest specimens of those noble old houses , each dwelling presents us with as marked an individuality of character as its inhabitants . Each doorway

, Avhich may be called the mouth of the architectural face , smiles on the approaching visitor , after its own peculiar fashion ; its crisply decorative foliage of stone or marble , seeming , in its playful

exuberance , to break into actual words of welcome , symbolised by fruits or flowers cast forth , as it were , in our path . And then these symbols of welcome ai-e generally blended , by the ingenious fancy o the designer , with characteristic implements or emblems connected with the calling or profession

of the occupier . Next come the windowsseeming the glistening eyes of the architectural physiognomy—and they beam on the passers by , each with its own peculiar and delicately different expression—sometimes open and brilliant , where the framing is broad or lofty , as looking forth from

lids widely and fearlessly raised ; while from other window-eyes of the architectural face a somewhat languishing though not the less pleasing glance steals softly toAvards us , as though from gracefully drooping lids , formed by a more than usually depressed curve of the superincumbent wreath or

label . The comes the gable , the forehead of the edifice—now high and bold—now soft and loweach wearing its own peculiar coronal , its jewels or flowers peculiar to itself—jewels of stone or marble , made more precious than those of the soi-disant precious metals by the skilful hand of the carver . All this and mora we shall see

exemplified in tne houses of our streets within the next twenty years , instead of the ' poor , IOAV , characterless fronts and unmeaning length of sham facades of factitious Corinthian or Ionic that exist in oui present Regent-street . It is true , that in so far as Reg-ent-street is concerned , great impediments

to change exist . The ground is CroAvn property , held under leases drawn up by Crown lawyers , and , of course , stuffed cram full of clauses intended to form insurmountable barriers to alterations or improvements of any kind . One would be induced to imagine that the hih authorities in

g whose departments such business is transacted Avould be disposed to facilitate such arrangements as might render costly improvements more practicable ; but such is not found to be the case . A recent philosophic investigator of such matters . Professor Charles Dickenshas discovered the

, cabalistic principle on Avhich questions connected with public improvements are manipulated in those quarters . It is the principle of " how not to do it "—in face of Avhich motive power , possessing , as it does , a powerful double-backward action , it is found exceedingly difficult to get forward .

Nevertheless , and in spite of all the battling of the Partingtonian broom , the tide of improvement has sternly set in , and will inevitably sweep away Regent-street , notwithstanding all the bindingest of clauses in the most stringent of crown leases . Next , and which ought to have come first , let us consider the architectural prospects of the banks of the Thames—that Thames to Avhich London

itself owes its existence . Within the time specified , it present filthy state will have been thoroughly purified , and the wretched agglomeration of inferior and squalid buildings on its shores will have given place to a noble series of public and

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