Crystal Palace: Difference between revisions

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==Planning and Construction==
==Planning and Construction==
[[Image:Cpplans.jpg|thumb|left|250px|Sir Joseph Paxton's original rough sketch of his plans for the Crystal Palace]]
[[Image:Cpplans.jpg|thumb|left|250px|Sir Joseph Paxton's original rough sketch of his plans for the Crystal Palace]]
The Commissioners for the Great Exhibition originally envisioned a large, permanent building of brick and stone, and the early proposals were massive indeed.  However, when they chose Hyde Park for the exhibition's site, many were concerned at the thought of such a large, fixed structure's impact on the Park, which defenders hailed as one of the "lungs of the metropolis."  It was at this point that Sir Joseph Paxton informally approached one of the commissioners, and sketched out a rough elevation (shown at left) of a multi-story glass structure, with cast iron uprights and supports, which he claimed could be speedily built, incorporating exiting trees ''inside'' its structure, and removed afterward, preserving the Park as a green space.  With Paxton's proposal in hand, the Commissioners set forth a remarkable new set of criteria, including a much-reduced budget and a requirement that any structure built be dismantled at the conclusion of the Exhibition.  Paxton's proposal, as they well knew, was now the only one which met the new criteria, and it was speedily approved.


==The Great Exhibition==
==The Great Exhibition==

Revision as of 19:17, 3 June 2007

"Last Promenade at the Crystal Palace" 1852. Note the tree completely enclosed by the Palace structure; preserving the trees was one of the provisos insisted upon when it was built at Hyde Park.

The Crystal Palace was built to house the Great Exhibition of the Industry of All Nations in Hyde Park, London, in 1851. After the Exhibition, it was moved and expanded and rebuilt on Sydenham Hill overlooking London, where it enjoyed a second life from 1854 until its destruction in a horrific fire in 1936.

The Crystal Palace is a significant structure in many ways; it was the first structure of its size assembled out of prefabricated parts; its system of horizontal trusses has since become one of the most widely-used construction methods in the world; it was at the time the world's largest enclosed open-air structure; and its success inspired the building of similar structures around the world, from the New York Crystal Palace in New York City to the Kibble Palace in Glasgow. It also has enormous historical and cultural significance as a symbol of technological prowess and imperial power, and in its second incarnation in Sydenham as a suburban pleasure palace drawing crowds away from the central metropolis. While at Sydenham, it also served as a concert hall, famous for its performances of Handel with a massed orchestra, choir, and the Palace's enormous organ; a recording of such a performance in 1888 is the earliest known recording of live music in exsitence. Its exterior parks, with fountains, terraces, and an outdoor exhibition of life-size dinosaur sculptures, was also highly influential. It also housed, from 1933 to 1936, the experimental studios of the Baird television company, which made regular short-wave broadcasts from its South Tower.

Planning and Construction

Sir Joseph Paxton's original rough sketch of his plans for the Crystal Palace

The Commissioners for the Great Exhibition originally envisioned a large, permanent building of brick and stone, and the early proposals were massive indeed. However, when they chose Hyde Park for the exhibition's site, many were concerned at the thought of such a large, fixed structure's impact on the Park, which defenders hailed as one of the "lungs of the metropolis." It was at this point that Sir Joseph Paxton informally approached one of the commissioners, and sketched out a rough elevation (shown at left) of a multi-story glass structure, with cast iron uprights and supports, which he claimed could be speedily built, incorporating exiting trees inside its structure, and removed afterward, preserving the Park as a green space. With Paxton's proposal in hand, the Commissioners set forth a remarkable new set of criteria, including a much-reduced budget and a requirement that any structure built be dismantled at the conclusion of the Exhibition. Paxton's proposal, as they well knew, was now the only one which met the new criteria, and it was speedily approved.

The Great Exhibition

The Crystal Palace in Hude Park (photographer unknown)

Move to Sydenham

Concerts and Fireworks

Later Years

Final decades and destuction

The Palace site today