Was it all a gimmick? When the building won the 2010 Carbuncle Cup, the judges’ verdict was scathing:
“…as the sole tall building in its locale, it is utterly inescapable for miles around…
“…to literally cap it all off there are the three gargantuan wind turbines at the top. The architect has trumpeted that these could supply 8% of the building’s energy requirements, which seems nothing much to shout about given the enormous expenditure in carbon that has been required to engineer such a baroque arrangement and the fact that this is a part of London that has absolutely no need for the creation of a 147m-tall tower.
“For services to greenwash, urban impropriety and sheer breakfast-extracting ugliness, we hereby award the 2010 Carbuncle Cup to the Strata tower.”
But was it really greenwash? Three thirty-foot turbines is more than a token effort. As the first skyscraper to incorporate the technology, this was a genuine attempt to break new ground.
As yet, as much as I approve of wind power, it’s best located away from human habitation. People and wind turbines just don’t mix (though, if they get too close, wind turbines could mix people). Certainly, there is noise, vibration and flicker, so not the best match for a residential development.
A few years earlier, David Cameron — then leader of the opposition — made headlines after he installed solar panels and a micro-wind turbine on his house. Embarrassingly, the latter was soon removed due to planning problems. Today, solar panels are a common sight on all sorts of buildings, but you’ll be lucky to spot a wind turbine. Fundamentally, the problem isn’t with the planning system, but the laws of physics. With this technology, size matters — the bigger the span of blades, the more efficient the turbine.
It’s a relationship that’s been exploited to drive down the costs of wind power. By getting bigger, it’s got cheap enough to out-compete other energy sources, and without subsidies. The turbines deployed in new offshore windfarms are now gargantuan — about 500 times the generating capacity of those used in the Razor. Each blade weighs in the region of 30 tonnes and is roughly 250 feet long. That means a total diameter greater than the Strata tower is tall.
In short, wind power belongs out to sea or in the middle of nowhere, not on — or in — buildings. Sadly, the Razor’s cutting-edge tech was a dead end.
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Architecturally and economically, however, the building was a trailblazer. Over the last decade London has sprouted towers of all shapes and sizes, developers competing to build the next new landmark. In its own neighbourhood of Elephant and Castle, the Strata no longer stands alone. Our low density capital is now a city of high rises.
Far from being the biggest victim of the financial crash, London roared back to life after 2010 — leaving the rest of the county trailing in its wake. Politically, the glittering, lofty towers would highlight the growing gap between the puffed-up global city and the left-behind Britain beyond its orbit — a gap that would tear the country apart in 2016.
So if Canary Wharf symbolises Thatcherism, and the Gherkin Blairism, then, in more ways than one, the Razor embodies the follies of Cameronism. Looking back, it’s extraordinary that anyone thought that the voters would tolerate a third blast of neoliberalism. Thatcher had the excuse that it hadn’t been tried before; Blair could imagine that his was a kinder, gentler version; but what did Cameron and Clegg hope to achieve?
Well, it’s all over now. The pandemic has cruelly exposed the vulnerabilities of the globalised economy — and the superstar, sky-scraping architecture that houses it.
Suddenly, the herding of knowledge workers into centrally-located, open-plan office blocks doesn’t seem such a good idea. The same goes for high-rise apartment blocks — a stunning view is only partial compensation when you’re locked-down in your glass bubble. Not that you’re completely sealed off. You’re breathing the same re-circulated air as your neighbours and colleagues. You’re sharing the same lifts. And, if you’re commuting, riding the same buses, trains and taxis. How will any of that work if the virus doesn’t go away?
When you build on a human scale you can do without the life support systems. You can spurn the lift and take the stairs; switch off the air-con and open a window. When people live and work within communities they can walk or cycle across, they’re not paralysed without mass transit. And when the natural connection between the metropolis and its hinterland matters more than the exclusive club of global cities, then we can face the collapse of global aviation and carry on.
But we’ve built for a world without infectious disease. We’ve assumed that the plagues of the past have no future. And so, for the sake of our way of life, we must pray for an end to our present nightmare.
According to Knight Frank, 60 tall buildings were completed in London last year — a record number. Remarkably, a further 525 were at “various stages of the planning process”. I wonder how many of those are even relevant now?
The FT reports that leasing activity has plummeted in London — with levels in March 88% down on a year ago. There’ll be a partial rebound, but can London carry on building more than 10 million square metres of new office space every year? Or is the underlying economic model permanently bust?
I hope that’s a question that Rishi Sunak is thinking about. I know he’s got enough other things to think about right now, but when or if we emerge from the pandemic he needs to decide whether the road to recovery looks like 2010, or whether we must set out on a new path.
The government talks about levelling-up. But what is it that he wants the North, the Midlands etc to level-up to? A globalised, glass tower economy that just doesn’t make sense anymore?
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SubscribeLets start from the top:
1. Wind turbines will generate electricity but they are so inefficient they are of little use. The wind does not always blow and when it does, it does not always come from the same direction and then there can be to little or to much wind. Net result is a single turbine only generates electricity about 30% of the time and it often comes in surges. We therefore need to keep power stations spinning as reserve to pick up the slack when wind suddenly drops off. This “spinning reserve” is often coal and oil fired stations. So in reality no carbon emission have been saved. The second problem with turbines is, as the write points out, they need to be in the sea or in remote place. This means electricity has to be transmitted a long way to get to the point of use. Electricity “leaks” from the cables and transmitting it long distances, often through cables that were not intended to take such high loads or move electricity in the direction it is going, results in a high loss rate. In Northern Ireland about a third of wind power “leaks” out this way because the wind is in the west of the Provence and the bulk of the population is in the east and the infrastructure is not designed to move power from west to east!
2. Margaret Thatcher was not “neoliberal”. The reality was she took an old system and shook it up because it needed. Neoliberalism was Blair’s version of Thatcherism. He developed the policy of “exporting” carbon emission and his government changed the banking regulations to allowed the banks to inflate their balance sheets based on a desire for globalism that relied on a “one size fits all” regulatory model. Blair repealed the Conservative regulatory model!
3. As of now we are afraid, afraid of the virus, afraid that our neighbour might infect us and afraid of the world because a few scientists (not all) told us this was going to be a cataclysmic event and the media picked up the scare stories and ran with them. Reality is when this all settles down and we look at it properly the cure is going to have been much worse than the disease. I hope we learn the lessons and don’t repeat these mistakes again. We are a social species, we need to get back to social interaction or we will die out very quickly!
Excellent post. There is no such thing as “wind power”. It is wind energy. This is no quibble. One is measured in MW, the other in MW/h. The energy is generated in fits and starts according to the inverse cube law. If the wind speed of the turbine’s max. power rating falls by 1/2, the energy output falls by 1/2 x 1/2 x 1/2 or 1/8, or by 88.5%. As one leading expert put it “wind turbines occupy a huge spatial footprint for a piddling amount of electricity”.
In Manchester – the council is allowing anyone to build the slums of the future. I am 60 and have lived in Manchester all my life. I loved it in the 1970s and 1980s but I hate it now it’s a concrete jungle with all our heritage and history ruined for empty hidious tower blocks owned by the Chinese or Russian Oligarcs, There is no affordable housing Richard Leese and his croneys just want to turn My City into a globalist hub with no Mancunians
In London they don’t call it the Razor they call it what it really looks like; Mordor.
Regards
NHP
Agree largely David – what we need is nuclear power. Just hope Londoners don’t panic en masse and move to the country – thereby rendering it a misnomer.
Nuclear power? Interesting. As the search for reliable and safe repositories for waste disposal from nuclear installations goes on, perhaps it’s time that planners face reality and look at the London Clay as a good geological formation for disposal rather than the fractured granites of Lakeland.
Under the Houses of Parliament may be the best spot for the next NWR. It would certainly focus the attention of planners on the waste issue.
There’s no such thing as a free lunch, especially in energy generation…
Well of course you have a point. Science will have to progress before it becomes acceptable. So I looked up some stuff, what do you think?https://www.world-nuclear.o…
Taking the long view, the 1918 influenza pandemic didn’t prevent the growth of high-rise building. There were also significant influenza pandemics in the late 1950s and again in the late 1960s which didn’t stop it’s growth.
The advance of technology with video conferencing, internet and mobile telephony changes the situation somewhat but outside of a pandemic, there are still significant advantages in terms of access to jobs and labour markets, to entertainment, culture, education, public services and transport, which favour living in and locating businesses in dense urban areas, which given shortage of land still requires building upwards.
So on balance I’d say no, corona-virus won’t stop the growth of skyscrapers over the long term, though in the short to medium term the social response and the financial and economic consequences could slow their development.
It’s also worth considering how much of this skyscraper development is due to innovation in civil engineering; apparently building skyscrapers on London clay was very difficult, they are normally build on foundations sunk into bedrock. Building skyscrapers in London was difficult and costly, but relatively easy in parts of New York. There has been some innovations in foundation engineering which makes it possible to built high rise structures on clay, so the economics of development pivots from building outward to building upward.
Probabbly in London. Definitely not in Hong Kong or Singapore.
Personally found this an interesting line of thought. Green energy I’m all for it it But if it costs too much time, Labour and money and produces little return it’s pointless. If you don’t have high rise development you also can’t have growth of an area. This within itself could be the answer. Do away with centres of Financial influence, spread it round. No need to all be in the same street.
Interesting trends here…All the bankers, lawyers, accountants, fund managers, insurance companies, property companies, pension consultants I talk to say they won’t be back in their London offices until Dec/Jan
This collective apathy is effectively “Racist”; not intentionally so but the vast majority of these people are white educated. The vast majority of the workers who clean offices, wait in restaurants or coffee shops, courier between offices are immigrant. Of course the taxi drivers – largely white white and Uber drivers largely BAME will also suffer.
Yes we can all work from home but in doing so we may all destroy the City and West End we have come to enjoy.
We need as Theresa Villiers said a proper Back to Work Campaign supported by a strict mask, and track nd trace regime
“Could coronavirus topple skyscrapers?”
No.
Next question.