North London Nordic
There are buildings that I file
mentally away in a category labelled ‘Must find out more about that’.
One such was Oslo Court, a block of flats looking on to Prince Albert
Road near the northern edge of Regent’s Park. I’d noticed it when I
lived in the area,
well over 30 years ago. When I first saw it, from a friend’s rapidly
moving car, I thought it might be a 1950s block – those brick walls and
pale-edged windows looked like a version of ‘Festival of Britain’
style. The lettering of the sign was attractive too, and perhaps the
name of the block made me think of ‘Scandinavian modernism’, another
name for the muted modernism of the 1950s. Passing again on foot the
other day, I decided, at last, to look it up.
Well, the
Scandinavian influence on British architecture predates the 1950s (as a
look in architectural magazines of the prewar period shows) and Oslo Court actually
dates to the 1930s. It is the work of Robert Atkinson,* whose
architectural practice began in the early-20th century in the Beaux Art
style and had moved to a restrained modernism by the time these flats
were built. The idea was to provide small flats, with just one bedroom, a
sitting room, a kitchen, and a bathroom,† and to give as many as
possible a view over the park. So the flats that don’t look directly on
to Prince Albert Road and the greenery beyond have balconies that are
stepped out from the side elevation (on the left in my photograph), so
that you can see towards the Park from them.
These balconies,
and the big Crittall windows, must let in plenty of light. And the way the
windows go around the corners of the building is very much a modernist
feature. But the modernism is toned down by the brick finish (it’s
essentially a concrete structure with brick facing and infill, I believe). Another
charming, non-modernist touch is the small sculptural panels, with
Nordic themes such as a reindeer and a longship seen front-on. The
Vikings are coming to St John’s Wood, and they like what they see.
- - - -
* There is more about this building and its architect here. This site also has information about Oslo Court's celebrated restaurant.
† One step up the size scale, as it were, from the more famous modernist flats by Wells Coates at Lawn Road, NW3.
I have dined at the very old-school Oslo Court restaurant a few times but not recently. To my shame, I never noticed the building properly! I do like those Crittall windows though. I believe the factory is still going in Witham, Essex.
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If they had been built a few decades earlier, they might have had to fit in the letters for CHRISTIANIA COURT, which wouldn't have looked so neat! Changing the name of Norway's capital has also proved a boon for crossword compilers. Might be a comfortable pied a terre whilst pining for the fjords but wouldn't be much fun with a young family or elderly relatives coming to stay. Unfortunately flats off Kennington Park Road and in Pimlico, that don't appear to be very much bigger, seem to be made to have to cope with just that. Nowhere as neat, but arguably more adaptably useful. When you are coming into Paddington station, and see the high brick flats with the tiny, tiny balconies where people contrive to keep their bikes or hang some washing, you know you're properly in London. Very insensitive use of architectural and building arts, one is tempted to say.
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