Climatron, Blackpool
1961
The Climatron was Terry Farrell's final year project at the School
of Architecture in Newcastle. Influenced by the teachings of Buckminster
Fuller, the scheme was a high-tech holiday island connected to the
base of Blackpool Tower.
The Climatron was envisaged as a piece of town planning rather than
a stand-alone piece of architecture. It had a new public square and
was a restoration project in the sense that it revealed and focused
in on the tower, providing dramatic new views of the historic structure
from the sea. The link between the new dome and the existing tower
was the start of a preoccupation that runs through all Terry Farrell's
work, as was the railway that linked the dome to the shore – people
movement has always been a key concern. Although the Climatron retained
the flavour of high-tech on the outside, the internal spaces were compartmentalized
into complex, almost Soanian areas, in contrast to the over-simplistic,
all-purpose high-tech interiors that are, in Charles Jencks's
words, 'entropic space'. The activity took place under
one roof and consisted of beaches and lakes around the edge of the
dome and an enormous multi-purpose dance hall/performance space in
the centre. The outside of the Climatron enabled walks up and down
its face, so visitors could use it like a man-mountain.
Inspired by the beauty of natural shapes, the Climatron's form
grew out of the sinuous shoots, leaves and petals that Terry Farrell
had explored in his earlier landscape drawings and his reading of D'Arcy
Thompson's On Growth and Form. Set out at sea and containing
an aquarium, the structure's link with nature was further explored
by its use of high-tech engineering that referenced the work of Buckminster
Fuller. Unusually for most students, the project featured a business
plan, reflecting Terry Farrell's preparation for his life as
a practitioner and prefiguring a statement he made in The Times in
November 1971:
'
Architects are notoriously product orientated … they tend to
be far too concerned with buildings as complete, finished entities
rather than with the process that goes into designing them … we
believe in providing a full consultancy service for our clients which
covers everything from tackling legal problems to demonstrating site
potential – in fact a considerable part of our activities are
not directed towards building buildings but towards providing services.'
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