Brent Town Hall

About Brent Town Hall

Brent Town Hall is a landmark building in Wembley Park in the London Borough of Brent, northwest London, England. The building was completed, as Wembley Town Hall, in 1940. It has been a Grade II listed building since 1990. The building is over 90, 000 square feet with a site area of about 5. 3 acres. The building is T-shaped, with a long façade on Forty Lane. Until 2013, the building was the seat of Brent London Borough Council and several civic services. The building is now occupied by the Lycée International de Londres Winston Churchill. The architect was Clifford Strange, who was 33 at the start of the project. Strange had worked for T. S. Tait from 1925–1935. Tait was influenced by the Dutch architect Willem Marinus Dudok (1884–1974), who had designed Hilversum Town Hall in the Netherlands. Strange followed Tait in imitating Dudok. Dudok was a modern architect but, unlike many Continental Modernists, he used brick (in this case, from Lincolnshire), a traditional material, rather than reinforced concrete. He also shunned functionalism. This made him very popular with British architects, as they were more used to using brick than concrete and had more conservative patrons. Most British town halls of the period were less innovative than Wembley's. It was even fitted with a bomb-proof first-aid post. In 1951, Pevsner described it as "the best of the modern town halls around London, neither fanciful nor drab". It has been described as an English interpretation of Modernism, using brick rather than concrete.

Brent Town Hall Description

Brent Town Hall is a landmark building in Wembley Park in the London Borough of Brent, northwest London, England. The building was completed, as Wembley Town Hall, in 1940. It has been a Grade II listed building since 1990. The building is over 90, 000 square feet with a site area of about 5. 3 acres. The building is T-shaped, with a long façade on Forty Lane. Until 2013, the building was the seat of Brent London Borough Council and several civic services. The building is now occupied by the Lycée International de Londres Winston Churchill. The architect was Clifford Strange, who was 33 at the start of the project. Strange had worked for T. S. Tait from 1925–1935. Tait was influenced by the Dutch architect Willem Marinus Dudok (1884–1974), who had designed Hilversum Town Hall in the Netherlands. Strange followed Tait in imitating Dudok. Dudok was a modern architect but, unlike many Continental Modernists, he used brick (in this case, from Lincolnshire), a traditional material, rather than reinforced concrete. He also shunned functionalism. This made him very popular with British architects, as they were more used to using brick than concrete and had more conservative patrons. Most British town halls of the period were less innovative than Wembley's. It was even fitted with a bomb-proof first-aid post. In 1951, Pevsner described it as "the best of the modern town halls around London, neither fanciful nor drab". It has been described as an English interpretation of Modernism, using brick rather than concrete.

More about Brent Town Hall

Brent Town Hall is located at HA9 9 London, United Kingdom
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