Bookmarks for March 15, 2012

  • Amazings
    This is brilliant, but I don't live in East London. This does not seem like the sort of thing it would be hard to roll out to new areas, mind. I just wish they'd hurry up and get to poor neglected Tooting.
  • Internet of Things Camera –
    I have often thought that I should learn a bit about this arduino business that all the cool kids are playing with. This one speaks directly to my interests, and looks (relatively) simple. If I find the spare time and cash, it might be a good place to start.

Bookmarks for December 10, 2010

Bookmarks for November 22, 2010

  • TSA pat-down leaves traveler covered in urine – Travel – News – msnbc.com
    I have elderly family who have to wear bags exactly like this. The thought that anyone could consider it acceptable to humiliate someone in a manner like this makes me furious – I just keep imagining what it would feel like if it happened to my family. I reckon I would expect them to have legal recourse, and the assurance that someone had lost their job over this, because I don't care about security half so much as I care about basic human dignity and respect.
  • The Ministry of Stories
    Stop what you are doing, and go and look at this link. I promise you: it will make your day 100% better. This is amazing and wonderful stuff.

Bookmarks for November 13, 2010

Bookmarks for November 12, 2010

  • You Write 'Bias Journalism' and I Read 'Derp'
    Joel Johnson treats people who write the comments on gizmodo like they deserve to be treated.
  • Is this evidence that we can see the future? – life – 11 November 2010 – New Scientist
    Between this, and the whole "the universe is actually only two dimensional" thing from a few weeks back, I'm becoming concerned about the informational underpinnings of reality. Of course, it's statistically more likely that we're all participants in some vast simulated reality than it is that we're actually really here, so y'know, whatever. I'd just like it if we were in a high resolution universe without the memory leaks.
  • A LIFE ON FACEBOOK on Vimeo
    Amusing conceit, slightly flawed movie. Has anyone written the Facebook equivalent of an epistolary novel yet, I wonder?
  • London Bloggers
    The London bloggers directory updates. Nice! I've just been through most of the Tooting Broadway ones, though, and most of them are dead or no longer updated, and I can spot a couple of people in there who I know don't live in Tooting any more. It's just me left hanging around, making the place look untidy…

Battersea Power Station

Battersea Power Station with a picture of the proposed redevelopment in the foreground

Today’s exciting news is that Battersea Power Station looks like it is, at long last, going to get the redevelopment that it has long been promised.

I love Battersea Power Station. It is a London totem, a lodestone for my internal compass of the city, and I’m delighted to see it properly preserved as part of the redevelopment.

I grew up in suburban South London, where they do not have the tube. Our quickest route up to London was by overground train in to Victoria, which meant passing Giles Gilbert Scott’s magnificent brick cathedral on the South Bank of the Thames. We weren’t in London until we’d gone past it, and my face was always there, pressed up against the glass of the train window to watch it slip by. If I dredge my memory, I think I can just about recall passing it where there was still smoke coming out of the stacks, as a very young child on what must have been one of my first trips up to London.

Even as a teenager, heading up to London with my friends on a Saturday afternoon, our route took us into Victoria, and while I was far too busy clowning around with my friends (and doubtless annoying everyone else on the train), and far too cool to press my face up against the glass, still, the fleeting glimpse of it was my marker that we were nearly there, that we were in the city proper, as opposed the shitty suburbs.

And as an adult, when I first joined the company I currently work for, one of the big selling points for me was that the office was just next door to the power station. I could, and often did, walk up there on my lunch break, to eat a sandwich while staring at the building – I couldn’t approach very close, but I could see it, nonetheless, and in some way, it made me feel like I was a proper grown up now – that I was sufficiently autonomous to be able to go and see this magical structure whenever I wished.

A couple of years back, I was absolutely delighted to get to look around the power station on an open day, and was amply repaid for doing so. Even in decay, it’s still a marvellous structure, and remains a fantastic feat of engineering and architecture.

There is a little bit of me, if I’m honest, that would sort of prefer that it wasn’t redeveloped. Part of the magic of it was that it was so recognisable, so much a part of my internal landscape of London, and yet so remote – not somewhere I could generally get to. If it becomes a building in whose shadow I can easily stroll around, then I worry that familiarity will breed contempt. Or I worry that the new development will block sight-lines, or re-contextualise that building in a manner that makes it less special. But if the alternative is that the building fall irreparably to ruin, then I’ll take whatever will keep it going.

I am just a little sad, though, that the transport option that’s gone along with these plans is a couple more tube stops. I mean, don’t get me wrong, more tube stops is good news, but I know that one of the transport options that got shot down in an earlier redevelopment plan that didn’t get approval was that Victoria station would be altered a bit to include a cable-car connection across the river to the power station. Tell me that wouldn’t have been magnificence itself.

But this one includes something that other didn’t, which makes me even happier, is that (part of) the power station will be used to generate power again – green power from biomass and waste this time. And while it’ll be steam, not smoke in the future, still, those massive stacks will breathe again.