Bankside Power Station Floor Plan

The eastern half of the building was brought into commission in 1963.
Bankside power station floor plan. The design was thought sufficiently grand to provide a fitting counterpoint to st paul s cathedral opposite it on the north bank of the river now linked to this site by the millennium bridge. The original power station can clearly be seen covering the land where the second half of the new bankside power station would later be built. London s bankside power station stood disused from 1981 until 2000 when it opened to the public as the tate modern. Plan and elevations incorporating bankside power station st paul s cathedral and a bridge coronavirus update.
Swiss architects herzog de. The northern frontage of the building is over 200m 650 ft long. The gallery is located in the old bankside power station originally designed by sir giles gilbert scott and built in two phases between 1947 and 1963 the building fell into disuse after 1981. The next photo is also from 1952 and shows the power station looking from the north.
The redundant bankside power station designed by sir giles gilbert scott and built in two phases between 1947 and 1963 was chosen as the site for the new gallery. The western half of the structure which included the chimney replaced an earlier coal fired power station in 1952. The redevelopment of bankside power station suspended during the war was started again by the city of london electric lighting company limited in 1944. In 2000 the new building was opened with tate modern and it has become one of the major british museums besides being one of the most visited in london.
The building was built in two phases between 1947 and 1963. Scott s bankside b power station replaced bankside a in turn and opened in 1952 though it was not completed until 1963. In 1981 the bankside power station closed. Completed in 2000 in london united kingdom.
Our printing service continues to operate as usual with framed and unframed prints available for delivery in normal timescales. It developed plans for a new power station with an ultimate capacity of 300 mw and submitted these to the planning authority the london county council in 1944. Situated on a 3 43 hectare 8 48 acre site on the south side of the river thames opposite st paul s cathedral. This again shows the original power station to the left of the new bankside power station.