Essayer OR - Gratuit
Playing with history
Country Life UK
|September 07, 2022
A post-Modern livery hall that is a striking home for an ancient company can teach us something about sensitive development in London.
Founders' Hall, Cloth Fair, London EC1
The Worshipful Company of Founders
FOUNDERS’ HALL, situated in Cloth Fair in the Smithfield Conservation Area, is less than 40 years old, but already has some of the character of an established historic building. Its elevations make an intended foil to the ancient structures surrounding it. As well as being the headquarters of a medieval livery company, the building also contains income-producing flats and commercial offices.
The Founders decided to move here from their previous Victorian home in St Swithin’s Lane (near the Bank of England on Threadneedle Street) and acquired the site at the east end of the venerable Norman church of St Bartholomew the Great in 1983. The new building was completed in 1986, the date being recorded in a cast-brass foundation roundel inset into the floor of the hall staircase, in a ceremony led by the Lord Mayor of London. That plaque was cast by a member of the Founders’, a City livery company that, as do the Goldsmiths’ and Fishmongers’, still retains close working links with its original craft, including all types of metal founding, especially brass and bells.
The new livery hall was designed by the late Sam Lloyd of London architectural firm Green Lloyd and Adams. He was the grandson of the distinguished Edwardian architect Curtis Green (whose masterpiece is now the Wolseley Restaurant, Piccadilly). The firm flourished for three generations and the Founders’ Hall is its swansong, as well as an example of the City’s astonishing knack of manifesting unbroken antiquity in modern dress.

Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition September 07, 2022 de Country Life UK.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE Country Life UK
Country Life UK
Earth's Eden
Chris Cotonou journeys to New Zealand, where dramatic landscapes conspire to slow time and stir the soul
7 mins
April 15, 2026
Country Life UK
Roasted cod with Jersey Royals and peas-and-lettuce pesto cream
Kitchen garden cook Jersey Royals
1 mins
April 15, 2026
Country Life UK
Of cabbages and kings
I DON'T usually think about sealing wax when I go aboard a ship, so I'm not sure why I began thinking about kings as I was pricking out my cabbages.
2 mins
April 15, 2026
Country Life UK
Let's raise a glass
Homes with wine cellars offer discerning buyers climate-controlled conditions that let collections age gracefully, so that every gathering becomes a toast-worthy triumph. Cheers!
3 mins
April 15, 2026
Country Life UK
The best things come in threes
The National has a trio of excellent new productions, including a star-studded Les Liaisons Dangereuses, and a new star is born playing a 20-year-old van Gogh
4 mins
April 15, 2026
Country Life UK
Braking with tradition
How many seamen does it take to move a Rolls-Royce and Land Rover from a royal yacht? Jeremy Taylor gets behind the wheel of the fleet that lived in a bespoke garage aboard RY Britannia
5 mins
April 15, 2026
Country Life UK
Rocket men
The Rothschilds rose from a gloomy German ghetto to the top of the world in one generation. A new display at Waddesdon Manor charts their extraordinary history
8 mins
April 15, 2026
Country Life UK
Drawn to the page
The Paris drawing fairs delivered an exciting array of artists old and new, but a wide selection of art references of all kinds comes in the guise of the Russell Taylor library, now for sale online
4 mins
April 15, 2026
Country Life UK
Growing gains
I STILL cannot use my thumbs when potting up a rooted cutting or potting on a plant. I use my fingers. They are better at gauging the pressure needed to firm the compost, be it peat-free (lightness of touch is important) or soil-based (a little firmer). It is not something I learned from a book.
3 mins
April 15, 2026
Country Life UK
Where dinosaurs dare to tread
Lost until a chance discovery in 2009, this Victorian fernery has not only been restored, but now houses two National Collections. Charles Quest-Ritson visits
5 mins
April 15, 2026
Translate
Change font size

