Apollo Pavilion (Pasmore
Pavilion)
Sunny Blunts Housing Estate,
Peterlee, County Durham
Victor Pasmore, 1963-70
Unlisted
The Apollo Pavilion, like the space mission for which it was named,
was the fruit of an optimistic post-war climate. There was a general
belief that good design assured social harmony, and for this reason
Victor Pasmore (Master at Kings College Newcastle) was selected
to act as consultant to the architects of the Peterlee New Town.
The result was visually exciting flat-roof housing with brickwork
and factory prefabricated timber infill panels. Today these radical
designs are barely visible, concealed behind an abundance of PVC
windows and pitched roofs. Only the pavilion remains to hint at
a different history.
The idea for the Pavilion stemmed from the need to emphasise the
focal point made by the small lake which separated the road from
the pedestrian system. The Pavilion is actually a sort of abstract
concrete bridge spanning the shallow lake. Victor Pasmore described
it as ‘an architecture and sculpture of purely abstract form
through which to walk, in which to linger and on which to play,
a free and anonymous monument which, because of its independence,
can lift the activity and psychology of an urban housing community
on to a universal plane.’ Pasmore was certainly successful
in that as indeed, many people ‘lingered’ and ‘played’,
unfortunately, not of the innocent sort which was envisaged: the
sculpture became canvas for graffiti and meeting ground for unsociable
activities.
Back in 1998, the Pavilion became a cause celebre when English
Heritage recommended that the structure be listed Grade II* and
that Tony Banks, the then Secretary of State, refused to take EH’s
advice partly because of local ‘public hostility’ and
the fact that it was the scene for ‘undesirable activities’.
The Pavilion’s fate has been in the balance for some years
and it was rumoured that the local authority was looking into its
possible demolition.
Fortunately, demolition now seems unlikely; as a result of recent
favourable publicity, (a video installation by artists Jane and
Louise Wilson at the Baltic gallery) public opinion has swung in
favour of the Pavilion. A steering group formed in March 2002 by
concerned local residents and members of the artistic community
have ambitious plans for the pavilion. Proposals for both seasonal
and permanent structures with controlled bridge access are being
discussed to allow the pavilion to be used as an event space. This
in combination with the conversion of an original house into museum
would turn this pure abstract form into a place for interaction
in Peterlee. The proposal engages both residents and the expanding
market of cultural tourism, and would ensure that the only surviving
element embodying the idealism of its time lives on.
Of course these grand plans can be accomplished only if the steering
group can secure funds for their proposals.
James Furlong
Current status
January 2006
Although no restoration has been carried out, the Pavilion continues
to be at the centre of local debate. The Pasmore Pavilion Steering
Group is currently drafting a bid to receive lottery funding for
the renovation project that was discussed in 2004. The plans for
the project have not been finalised but will include the full renovation
of the pavilion (together with its murals and sculpture), the restoration
of the neighbouring house to its original 1950s new town specifications
for the purpose of housing a visitor centre, together with a bridge-link
providing a walkway between the two structures. The present state
of the Pavilion is reasonable if somewhat neglected. The Council
is still carefully maintaining the original pond and landscaping
that so compliment the Pavilion’s sculptural qualities. There
seems to be considerable local interest in the renovation project;
this could wane however, if the plans (already in their second year)
fail to materialise. The quicker the Pavilion can be repaired and
put back to use the better.
Further reading
Building Design, 9 September 2001, p 18
The architects’ Journal, 11 October 2001, p 44-8
Contacts
Brian Shariff, secretary to the Pasmore Pavilion Steering Group,
T 0151 236 7341 at Gilling Dod Architects
Image credits
Top John Pasmore
Bottom Elain Harwood
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