Express Lift Tower
Weedon Road, Northampton, Northamptonshire
Stimpson and Walton (architects), Michael Barclay Partnership (engineers),
1980-82
Listed Grade II
When opened by the Queen in 1982 to much celebration, the partly
government funded Express Lift Tower was conceived as a structure
playing a significant role in the future development of lift technology.
As the only building of its type in Britain it provided much needed
facilities to test lifts and their components and to train staff
in their installation and maintenance. With three separate shafts,
faults from all around the world could be simulated in the tower,
from the smallest residential block to the tallest skyscraper.
Architects Stimpson and Walton reflected the significance of the
building in their design. Rising from a heavy concrete base this
tapering parabolic form soars graciously over the Northampton countryside,
appearing taller than its grand 127 metres. In reaching up to the
sky the tower celebrates the contribution that the lift has made
to modern architecture and the skylines of our cities. The tower
itself has become part of the skyline and has become a popular landmark
to locals.
Unfortunately, despite the large public support and the high standard
of facilities (it is the tallest testing tower in Europe and America),
the building stands empty and in a deteriorating condition. Since
the last workers clocked out on the 27th of January 1997, the property
has changed hands a number of times, and the tower has been faced
with various applications for demolition by detonation. However
in a strange twist of fate the chances of any future applications
for demolition are unlikely. Taylor Woodrow (the current owners)
have built so close to the tower that the only safe way to remove
it would be by hand, making it prohibitively expensive.
The future of the Express Lift Tower now lies with a consortium
currently looking to take-over the ownership and use the structure
for its original purpose. The take-over is proving to be a complicated
process as the consortium is trying to obtain compensation from
the previous owners, who failed to carry out their contractual maintenance
obligations. It is estimated that a minimum of £300,000 is
required to cover the concrete in an Elastomeric coating to prevent
the concrete from weathering.
A successful take-over would rejuvenate a modern building that
still retains its usefulness. The lift tower could provide a much
needed testing facility to the surrounding Lift Industries and University
of Northampton lift engineering department. Reuse could help secure
the future of lift manufacture in Northampton and save an important
local landmark and a structure of national significance.
James Furlong
Current Status
January 2006
The Tower remains under the ownership of Taylor Woodrow as the take-over
by the unnamed consortium never came about. The council seem keen
on the re-use of the tower for its original lift-testing purposes.
Despite its somewhat stranded position (surrounded at close proximity
by new houses), sustainable re-use capabilities for the Tower are
considerable. “Tower Village”, the surrounding residential
development, was planned and approved on the basis that the Express
Tower would continue to be uses for lift testing. Despite being
hemmed in, there is space enough for the service yard and H.G.V.
parking that a functioning test site would necessitate. The most
likely solution to the Tower’s current dormancy would see
various lift manufacturers, technical researchers (from Northampton
University) and the British Standards Institute contracting use
of the Tower. The Planning and Regeneration Division of the Council
has also suggested the possibility of projecting advertisements
on the surface of the Tower which could generate income. However
there are still no definite plans and Taylor Woodrow’s commitment
to finding a purpose for the Express Lift Testing Tower seem, at
best, half-hearted. The Tower was a highlight of the Twentieth Century
Society’s visit to Northampton in October 2005, where participants
were most impressed by the structure’s awe inspiring height
and presence.
Contacts
Jane Jennings, Northampton Borough Council, T 01604 837637
Stephen Chown, commercial surveyor for the consortium, T 01604 604050
Image credits
Photographs Elain Harwood
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