Harley Sherlock: A Talk by Catherine Philiips

Mon Apr 08 2024 at 07:00 pm to 09:00 pm

The Gallery, Cowcross Street | London

Docomomo UK
Publisher/HostDocomomo UK
Harley Sherlock: A Talk by Catherine Philiips
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A look at the key works and ideas of the London architect
About this Event

Harley Sherlock (1926-2014) was a London-based architect who specialised in both private and public housing, working in partnership with Malcolm Andrews, Alan Emmerson, and Julian Keable. He was better known as an avid campaigner for a revitalised inner-city, and as a well respected advisor to planners in Islington. Unusually for his generation, Sherlock’s public sector work was carried out from his own small practice, as Andrews Sherlock & Partners.

The firm’s early schemes included an estate of houses for private sale in Highgate, the Southwood Development (1959-61), and a medium rise block of private flats in Bayswater, St Olave’s Court (1961). During the 1960s, Sherlock developed an approach to urbanism that put him at odds with the car-centric, mixed height development orthodoxy of the era. Championing the existing fabric of much of inner London, he argued for a low rise, yet denser city, with vibrant, mixed use neighbourhoods, street oriented, with good public transport.

In 1968, the London Borough of Islington commissioned Sherlock's practice to demonstrate these ideas with a scheme of 205 dwellings at Popham Street. With two and three storey buildings he achieved densities higher than most of London’s tower block estates. The practice combined this approach with conservation, focused on the rehabilitation of Georgian and Victorian terraces as council housing. At sites such as Tibberton Square and Claremont Square, they turned larger buildings into smaller dwellings, while giving every resident access to open space and excellent daylight.

This talk will explore Sherlock's earliest terraced housing project, the Southwood Development, the little known St Olave’s Court, the low-rise, high-density council housing at Popham Street, and the rehabilitation of the Georgian Tibberton Square.

Catherine Phillips was a director of MPH architects (2006-2020), who designed the Cork House, Eton. Her interest in Harley Sherlock began when commissioned to refurbish one of the flats in his St Olave’s Court. She teaches architecture at University of East London, and Westminster University. She is also an artist and plays electric violin in a rock band.

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Event Venue & Nearby Stays

The Gallery, Cowcross Street, 77 Cowcross Street, London, United Kingdom

Tickets

GBP 12.00

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