LLOYD'S BUILDING
Hi guys, I want to tell you about one of
amazing structure in this world. I am sure that you will be stunned to see this
stucture. That Amazing stucture is LLOYD'S
BUILDING!!! Let me tell you about Lloyd's building, REMEMBER I never visit Lloyd's building, so, many infomation about Lloyd's
building that I will give to you are
from internet. Before I tell you about Lloyd's
building, I want to say thankyou to Internet , THANKYOU INTERNET
<3<3,<3.
The Lloyd's
building (sometimes known as the
Inside-Out Building) is the home of the insurance
institution Lloyd's of London. It is located on the former
site of East India House in Lime Street, in London's main financial
district, the City of London. The building is a leading
example of radical Bowellism architecture in which the services for the building,
such as ducts and lifts, are located on the exterior to maximise space in the
interior.
Twenty-five years after completion in 1986, the
building received Grade I listing in 2011; it was the youngest structure
ever to obtain this status. It is said by English
Heritage to be "universally recognised as one of the key
buildings of the modern epoch."
The first Lloyd's building (address 12 Leadenhall
Street) had been built on this site in 1928. In 1958, due to expansion
of the market, a new building was constructed across the road at 51 Lime Street
(now the site of the Willis Building). Lloyd's now occupied the
Heysham Building and the Cooper Building.
By the 1970s Lloyd's had again outgrown these two
buildings and proposed to extend the Cooper Building. In 1978, the corporation
ran an architectural competition which attracted designs from practices such as
Foster Associates, Arup and I.M. Pei.
Lloyd's commissioned Richard Rogers to redevelop the site, and the
original 1928 building on the western corner of Lime and Leadenhall Streets was
demolished to make way for the present one which was officially opened by Queen
Elizabeth II on 18 November 1986. The 1928 building's entrance at 12
Leadenhall Street was preserved and forms a rather incongruous attachment to
the 1986 structure. Demolition of the 1958 building commenced in 2004 to make
way for the 26-storey Willis Building.
The current Lloyd's building (address 1 Lime
Street) was designed by architect Richard
Rogers and built between 1978 and 1986. Bovis
was the management contractor. Like the Pompidou Centre in Paris (designed by Renzo Piano
and Rogers), the building was innovative in having its services such as
staircases, lifts,
electrical power conduits and water pipes on the outside, leaving an
uncluttered space inside. The 12 glass lifts were the first of their kind in
the United Kingdom. Like the Pompidou Centre, the building was highly
influenced by the work of Archigram in the 1950s and 1960s.
The building consists of three main towers and
three service towers around a central, rectangular space. Its core is the large
Underwriting Room on the ground floor, which houses the Lutine Bell within the Rostrum. The
Underwriting Room (often simply called "the Room") is overlooked by
galleries, forming a 60 metres (197 ft) high atrium lit naturally through
a huge barrel-vaulted
glass roof. The first four galleries open onto the atrium space, and are
connected by escalators through the middle of the structure. The higher floors
are glassed in and can only be reached via the exterior lifts.
The 11th floor houses the Committee Room, an
18th-century dining room designed for the 2nd Earl of Shelburne by Robert Adam
in 1763; it was transferred piece by piece from the previous (1958) Lloyd's
building across the road at 51 Lime Street.
The Lloyd's building is 88 metres (289 ft)
to the roof, with 14 floors. On top of each service core stand the cleaning
cranes, increasing the overall height to 95.10 metres (312 ft). Modular in
plan, each floor can be altered by addition or removal of partitions and walls.
In 2008 the Twentieth Century Society called for
the building to be Grade I listedand in 2011 it was granted this
status.
The building was previously owned by Dublin-based
real estate firm Shelbourne Development Group, who
purchased it in 2004 from a German investment bank. In July 2013 it was sold to
the Chinese company Ping An Insurance in a £260 million deal.
That’s all obout Lloyd's building , and thanks a lot to internet that have helped
me tell about Lloyd's building. I am
sorry if I make mistake of using english words, Thankyou for reading
(Source: http://en.wikipedia.org)
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