1 - 9 Harriet Place, Byker Wall
1 - 9 Harriet Place, Byker Wall
HER Number
10296
District
Newcastle
Site Name
1 - 9 Harriet Place, Byker Wall
Place
Byker
Map Sheet
NZ26SE
Class
Domestic
Site Type: Broad
Terrace
Site Type: Specific
Terrace
General Period
20TH CENTURY
Specific Period
Late 20th Century 1967 to 2000
Form of Evidence
Extant Building
Description
And No. 6 Old Vicarage Walk. Two terraces. 1976-78 by Ralph Erskine's Arkitektkontor; site architect Vernon Gracie; structural engineer, White, Young and Partners; main contractor Shepherd Construction Limited. Pale modular metric brick on timber frame, with weatherboarding. Stone to nos. 20 and 21. Blue metal monopitch roofs with plywood box beam purlins. Two storeys, nos. 6 Old Vicarage Walk and nos. 4 and 9 Harriet Place set at right angles with projecting single-storey outshuts under cat-slide roofs and entrances to side.
Nos. 1-4 have weatherboarding to both sides. East elevation above high retaining wall. Weatherboarding to nos. 1-3, and to no. 4 above projecting outshut. West elevation overlooking school field has bright green eaves, with green weatherboarding to no. 1 and large green end bird box. Nos. 5-9 Harriet Place and no. 6 Old Vicarage Walk have east elevation with weatherboarding only above outshuts, and reached up steps to side of high retaining wall. Built-in seat and table. Side elevation with big green metal bird box. West elevation with bright green eaves, red metal door hoods and dark blue fences. Ends of the terraces continue as retaining walls to sides. Forms a group with Benson Place.
The Byker area, first extensively developed in the 1890s, was earmarked for redevelopment from the late 1950s, with a new motorway to the north. In March 1967 the Housing Architect's Department proposed the building of a barrier block to shelter the area, and this idea was supported by Ralph Erskine, who was invited to develop the area for Newcastle Corporation in 1969. His Plan of Intent, published in 1970, promised a complete redevelopment programme of housing and landscaping with cost yardsticks, while maintaining the traditions and character of the neighbourhood, and to rehouse the residents without breaking family and social ties. His achievement in rehousing 40% of the original residents on the original site was exceptional, as were his methods of keeping the community informed of development and seeking their support and suggestions for the low-rise housing. In achieving these goals Erskine sought to exploit the south-facing sloping site, to develop a system of pedestrian routes through the estate and to provide a `specific "local" individuality to each group of houses.' The estate was redeveloped in a rolling programme of no more than 250 units at a time, to try to maintain the community's infrastructure. The idea was a sheltering perimeter block, which protects the estate from traffic noise and creates a micro climate, with low-rise housing in its lee. The modular metric facing brick of 290mm x 90mm x 65mm was developed by Crossley and Sons in County Durham, in collaboration with the City of Newcastle. When mortared, it forms a 12" by 4" by 3" unit. The inventiveness of the decoration, developed following the relatively muted `pilot scheme' at Janet Square, marks Byker out from other post-war housing for bringing the humane concepts of `romantic pragmatism' with its neo-vernacular details and materials to public housing in a unique way. It is probably also the greatest achievement of this important and idiosyncratic international architect. `If there is something marvellously lighthearted about the design, this I would say is the topographical keynote of the new Byker' (Architectural Design, June 1975, p.333).
Sources
Tyne and Wear Archives
Architectural Review, December 1974, pp.346-62
Mats Egelius, Ralph Erskine, Architect, Stockholm 1990, pp.148-60 LISTED GRADE 2*
Nos. 1-4 have weatherboarding to both sides. East elevation above high retaining wall. Weatherboarding to nos. 1-3, and to no. 4 above projecting outshut. West elevation overlooking school field has bright green eaves, with green weatherboarding to no. 1 and large green end bird box. Nos. 5-9 Harriet Place and no. 6 Old Vicarage Walk have east elevation with weatherboarding only above outshuts, and reached up steps to side of high retaining wall. Built-in seat and table. Side elevation with big green metal bird box. West elevation with bright green eaves, red metal door hoods and dark blue fences. Ends of the terraces continue as retaining walls to sides. Forms a group with Benson Place.
The Byker area, first extensively developed in the 1890s, was earmarked for redevelopment from the late 1950s, with a new motorway to the north. In March 1967 the Housing Architect's Department proposed the building of a barrier block to shelter the area, and this idea was supported by Ralph Erskine, who was invited to develop the area for Newcastle Corporation in 1969. His Plan of Intent, published in 1970, promised a complete redevelopment programme of housing and landscaping with cost yardsticks, while maintaining the traditions and character of the neighbourhood, and to rehouse the residents without breaking family and social ties. His achievement in rehousing 40% of the original residents on the original site was exceptional, as were his methods of keeping the community informed of development and seeking their support and suggestions for the low-rise housing. In achieving these goals Erskine sought to exploit the south-facing sloping site, to develop a system of pedestrian routes through the estate and to provide a `specific "local" individuality to each group of houses.' The estate was redeveloped in a rolling programme of no more than 250 units at a time, to try to maintain the community's infrastructure. The idea was a sheltering perimeter block, which protects the estate from traffic noise and creates a micro climate, with low-rise housing in its lee. The modular metric facing brick of 290mm x 90mm x 65mm was developed by Crossley and Sons in County Durham, in collaboration with the City of Newcastle. When mortared, it forms a 12" by 4" by 3" unit. The inventiveness of the decoration, developed following the relatively muted `pilot scheme' at Janet Square, marks Byker out from other post-war housing for bringing the humane concepts of `romantic pragmatism' with its neo-vernacular details and materials to public housing in a unique way. It is probably also the greatest achievement of this important and idiosyncratic international architect. `If there is something marvellously lighthearted about the design, this I would say is the topographical keynote of the new Byker' (Architectural Design, June 1975, p.333).
Sources
Tyne and Wear Archives
Architectural Review, December 1974, pp.346-62
Mats Egelius, Ralph Erskine, Architect, Stockholm 1990, pp.148-60 LISTED GRADE 2*
Easting
427450
Northing
564530
Grid Reference
NZ427450564530
Sources
Department of Culture, Media and Sport, List of Buildings of of special architectural and historic interest, 1833/27/10202; Department of Culture Media and Sport, List of Buildings of Special Architectural and Historic Interest, 499032; North East Civic Trust, 2005, A Byker Future - The Conservation Plan for The Byker Redevelopment, Newcastle upon Tyne