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Past exhibitions

Tower Blocks: love them or loathe them?

30 April to 27 June 1999
 
Ronan Point 
Ronan Point, Freemasons Estate, Canning Town, 1966-8, built for Newham Borough Council.
Photo courtesy London Metropolitan Archives

Fifty years ago there were no high-rise buildings in London. Until, in May 1949, a ten-storey council housing block opened in Holborn. Since then around 2700 tower blocks have been built in Greater London, and the capital's skyline is constantly changing.

Tower blocks were seen as the way to build a better future in the 1950s and 1960s. But the 1968 Ronan Point gas explosion - when a corner of a 22-storey tower collapsed killing five people - heralded an anti-tower block backlash. In 1972 the Barbican Estate was completed boasting the highest tower in Europe; by the mid-1970s, however, high-rise building came to a halt as doubts were thrown on construction methods and the social consequences of poor quality building.

In the 1980s council towers began to be demolished, whilst some private towers started to appear. Now in the 1990s tower blocks are back on London's housing scene, as new blocks begin to thrust through the skyline and old blocks are given a second chance. In 1993 the first tower block was listed, and in 1998 a rash of high-rise luxury housing towers was proposed along both banks of the Thames.

Tower Blocks: love them or loathe them? includes scale models of key buildings, a huge map highlighting our 'top fifty' of London's high-rise housing blocks, and examples of modern design inspired by tower block imagery; it also gives voice to the residents themselves. In the Museum's foyer Tower Blocks: the artist's view (until 4 July) is a complementary exhibition showing contemporary artists' and photographers' response to these monumental post-war edifices.

Tower Blocks: love them or loathe them? poses questions which affect the daily lives of Londoners. What should happen to London's problem tower blocks - should we do them up or blow them up? Is there a place for tower blocks as desirable residences? Will the proposed new towers give London dramatic landmark buildings or will they hem in the river?



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355 Kings Road 
355 Kings Road, 1960s, by Chamberlain Powell & Bon for Kensington & Chelsea Borough Council. This block was privatised in 1988 and remodelled inside and out.
Photo by Mike Seaborne