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What's the newest listed building

01:00 Mon 29th Apr 2002 |

A.The Express Lift Tower in Northampton, which was opened by The Queen in November, 1982. It was only 17 years old when ministers used special powers to list it as a building of unusual interest. < xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" />

Q.What's a lift tower and is it still used

A.This 417ft tower was designed for the Express Lift Company to simulate and correct any fault that developed in a customer's lift. But it is no longer used - it became redundant when Express was taken over by the American elevator firm Otis in the mid-90s.

The tower was listed in 1997 as a unique structure - the only lift-testing tower in Britain. Inside there are two shafts where lifts can be tested simultaneously. One, for high-speed lifts, runs the full height, and a second, divided into three sections, accommodated hydraulic and medium-speed equipment.

Q.And what's it doing now

A.The lift factory was bought by Wilcon Homes, which was granted planning permission for a housing estate on the site, preserving the tower as a landmark. Roads were laid out concentrically around the tower. But there's a snag.

Q.What

A.The housing developers have applied for consent to demolish it, saying it has 'concrete cancer'.

Q.What's that

A.The alkaline in the cement reacts with silicon in the aggregate, causing the concrete to crack open, usually in a star formation. Water can then penetrate the concrete to a deeper level and in winter that can freeze, causing even worse problems.

However, engineers working for the local council and English Heritage say they have found little evidence of surface cracking.

Q.But surely it won't be demolished

A.No chance. Wilcon, however, said that it would serve a purchase notice requiring the council to buy the tower as a structure without any possible use. It might cost up to �100,000 for repairs. And English Heritage has just included the lift tower in its list of 21 sites to mark international World Monuments Day.

Q.What are the others

  • Brooklands Motor Racing Circuit, Elmbridge, Surrey, built in 1907
  • Marsh Court, Hampshire, 1901-4, by Edwin Lutyens
  • Liverpool Anglican Cathedral, 1902-79, by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott
  • Liverpool Pier Head: The Cunard Building, 1913-16, the Royal Liver Building, 1908-10, and the Mersey Docks and Harbour Offices, 1907
  • Letchworth Garden City, Herts, begun 1903, by Ebenezer Howard
  • Coliseum, London, 1904, by Frank Matcham
  • Boots Factory, Beeston, Notts, 1930-32, by Owen Williams
  • Royal Artillery Memorial, Hyde Park Corner, London, 1921-25, by Charles Sargent Jagger
  • Sissinghurst Castle Garden, Kent, begun 1930, by Harold Nicholson and Vita Sackville-West
  • De La Warr Pavilion, Bexhill, East Sussex, 1935, by Eric Mendelsohn and Serge Chermayeff
  • Impington Village College, Cambs, 1938-39, by Walter Gropius and Maxwell Fry
  • Coventry Cathedral, 1956-62, by Sir Basil Spence
  • Barbara Hepworth's sculpture garden, St Ives, Cornwall, 1951-75
  • Alton Housing Estate, Roehampton, Surrey, 1950-60, by London County Council architects
  • Jodrell Bank Telescope, 1952-7, by Charles Husband for Bernard Lovell, astronomer royal
  • St Catherine's College, Oxford, 1960-8, by Arne Jacobsen
  • Leicester University Engineering Building, 1960-3, by Sir James Stirling
  • University of East Anglia, 1963-8, by Sir Denys Lasdun
  • Barbican, London, 1963-82, by Chamberlin, Powell and Bon
  • Willis Faber Dumas, Ipswich, 1972-5, by Foster and Partners
  • Byker Estate, Newcastle, 1970-81, by Ralph Erskine

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Steve Cunningham

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