Risky Buildings
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Dudley Zoo

Dudley, West Midlands
Lubetkin and Tecton, 1936-37
Twelve listed buildings, seven Grade II and five Grade II*

Though Tecton’s better known virtuoso pavilions are to be found at London and Whipsnade, it is in the comprehensive scheme opened at Dudley in 1937 that the most complete example of the firm’s zoo design can be found. The Dudley Zoological Society was founded in 1935 to develop the historic site with Dudley Castle as a commercial venture. The buildings were completed to a demanding programme and on a steeply sloping site hilltop site, a task made possible by using ‘modern’ in-situ concrete construction. Dudley Zoo was visited by 250,000 people in the first year, and as such the Tecton buildings offered the first experience of Modern Architecture for the population of the West Midlands and beyond.

All the twelve surviving Tecton buildings are at risk. Five of these are listed at Grade II* and seven Grade II. John Allan, of Avanti architects, who has carried out a comprehensive study of Dudley Zoo says “the whole is greater that the sum of the parts, and … the sense of abstract consistency of the pavilions [makes] it essential to preserve their integrity as a group”. Their placing in, and relationship to, the landscape setting (spoilt, but not irreparably so) is also of unique interest.

The buildings now cut a forlorn figure having suffered from a lack of long-term maintenance and insensitive piecemeal alterations, and in the case of the Penguin Pool, even demolition (back in the 1970s). Concrete edges and sills are vulnerably chipped and interiors have been modernised with ‘heritage’ fittings. For reasons of public safety, additional metal tube and wire guarding has been to the existing, and unique, concrete dual level balustrade. Half-round timber fencing, used throughout the development has been added to certain pavilions. Some have been painted unsympathetically in brown, presumably in misguided attempt to blend the buildings with their environment, and some pavilions simply need to be painted.

The Elephant House, the Moat café and the Station café are amongst the most vulnerable. The future of the disused and seriously decayed Bear Ravine and the lower Kiosk, which adjoins it, is particularly precarious. These are both listed at Grade II* and are crucial elements of the composition.

Dudley Zoological Gardens, as the Zoo is now known, is progressing with plans to redevelop. A legal agreement between DZG at St Modwen was announced in June 2001, selecting them as preferred development partners to develop Dudley Zoo, Dudley Castle and over forty acres of Brownfield land and a major woodland area. The proposal is to regenerate the existing zoo and castle in a public/private joint venture and bring new supporting visitor attractions to the site. The developers submitted an outline planning application in early February 2004, and the Twentieth Century Society attended St Modwen’s presentation of the application.

The Society is concerned that an outline planning application is inappropriate, as it lacks the sufficient detail - namely a Conservation Plan - to address the issues of the Tecton buildings properly. Concerns were noted that the development will impinge of the crucial relationship between the buildings and the topography of the site itself, however until the Conservation Plan is completed definitive conclusions cannot be drawn.

The Society is “…convinced that Dudley Zoo can be made financially viable and is keen to see the Tecton building restored and re-used”. It appears that insensitive redevelopment poses the greatest threat to the buildings. The Twentieth Century Society, and statutory bodies such as English Heritage, now have the opportunity to work with the developers to encourage conservation and appropriate adaptation.

Tim Pitman

 

Current status
January 2006
The local authority is minded to pass the outline application described above, but before permission is given the developers must submit conservation documents covering both the listed buildings and the overall landscaping. A Section 106 agreement is being prepared which would guarantee the restoration of the listed structures being completed before any commercial development is being put to use. As the conservation documents are still outstanding the implementation of this scheme is unlikely to happen in the very near future.

Further reading
Books
Berthold Lubetkin, John Allan, 2002
Periodicals
Architect and Building News 1937 Nov. 5 p167-177
Architects Journal 1937 Nov 4 p717-722
Architectural Review 1937 Nov p177-186
Architect and Building News 1937 Nov 12 p201-207

Contacts
Dudley Metropolitan Borough Council, Peter Suddock, T 01384 818181
Dudley Metropolitan Borough Council, David Morris Business Development Manager, T 01384 814187, david.morris@dudley.gov.uk

Useful links
www.dudley.gov.uk/council/plan_app/regeneration/projects/castlehill.htm
www.dudley.gov.uk/news/press/corporate/Castle%20hill%20Decision.htm
Dudley Zoological Garden, T 01384 215 313, www.dudleyzoo.org.uk
St Modwen, T 0121 456 2800, www.stmodwen.co.uk

Image credits
Top image Tim Pitman
Others Elain Harwood