Victoria Tower Gardens

Summary

Victoria Tower Gardens is a public park along the north bank of the River Thames in London, adjacent to the Victoria Tower, at the south-western corner of the Palace of Westminster. The park, extends southwards from the Palace to Lambeth Bridge, between Millbank and the river. It forms part of the Thames Embankment.

Victoria Tower Gardens, 2011, with the Buxton Memorial Fountain and the Palace of Westminster in the background

Victoria Tower Gardens is a Grade II* listed park created in two stages in 1879–81 and 1913–14. It is in a conservation area, is partly within the UNESCO World Heritage Site of Westminster, and is designated a zone of Monument Saturation.[1]

History edit

 
The site of Victoria Tower Gardens in 1865.

The northern part of the gardens was acquired by the Government under the Houses of Parliament Act 1867 in order to reduce the fire risk to the Palace of Westminster from the wharves there. There was disagreement about whether at least some of the land should be built on, but eventually the newspaper retailer William Henry Smith donated £1000 towards laying it out as an open space and Parliament paid the remaining £1400 needed. The gardens opened in 1881.[2] The Government promised Smith that the land would be maintained as a recreation ground.[3][citation needed]

A private scheme to rebuild the area south of the gardens was discussed in Parliament in 1898 in the Victoria Embankment extension and St John's Improvement Bill,[4] and was rejected because it did not include extending the Gardens.[5] London County Council then brought forward its own scheme for widening Millbank, extending the Thames embankment and enlarging the open space southwards to Lambeth Bridge. The Commissioners of Works were expected to give up a small part of the existing Gardens for the road widening, and, in order to honour the promise to Smith, insisted that it be expressly provided in the Act authorising the scheme that the new land between Millbank and the river be laid out as a garden.[6] Consequently the London County Council (Improvements) Act 1900, which authorised the scheme, provided that the new land between Millbank and the Thames should be "laid out and maintained ... for use as a garden open to the public and as an integral part of the existing Victoria Tower Garden".[7] The new land was laid out as a garden in 1913-14 and opened to the public on 30 June 1914.[8]

A number of wharves were compulsorily purchased under the 1900 Act, including Dorset Wharf[9] which was purchased from George Taverner Miller, son of Taverner John Miller, from where he ran a "Sperm Oil Merchants and Spermaceti refining" business. The effects from this business and others were sold in 1905.[10]

The original gardens had a formal layout, with a central shrubbery. The garden was replanned with a less formal layout in 1913–14, with a shrubbery further south.[11] In 1956 the shrubbery and trees in the lawns were removed in order to provide more of a parkland atmosphere and an uninterrupted view of the Palace of Westminster.[12] The changes included (in 1957) erection in the Gardens of the Buxton Memorial. The present layout is essentially that of 1956–57.

Features edit

The park features:

Proposed UK Holocaust Memorial edit

In January 2015 Prime Minister David Cameron announced on behalf of the Holocaust Memorial Foundation that there was to be a new UK Holocaust Memorial and associated Learning Centre built in central London. At that stage three particular sites were proposed: the Imperial War Museum, Potter's Field near London City Hall, and on Millbank, south of the Houses of Parliament in Westminster.[13] However, on 27 January 2016 he announced that Victoria Tower Gardens had been chosen for the memorial.[14] It later became clear that the learning centre was also to be built in the Gardens, although this was never formally announced. A design competition was launched, and in October 2017 the UK Holocaust Memorial Foundation jury announced their chosen design.[15] The proposed construction was submitted for planning permission to Westminster City Council which had to consider breaching its own rules on new monuments in this zone and the effect on heritage views of the Palace of Westminster. The memorial plans attracted strong opposition to the use of this small park, both from the grassroots campaign of local residents through the 'Save Victoria Tower Gardens' [16] and international organisations like the UNESCO advisor ICOMOS.[17] On 8 April 2022, at judicial review, the High Court quashed the planning permission.[18] The Government has requested leave to appeal.

Transport edit

The nearest London Underground stations are Westminster and Pimlico.

References edit

  1. ^ Westminster City Council, Statues and Monuments in Westminster: Guidance for the Erection of New Monuments Supplementary Planning Document (PDF), pp. 21 and 23, archived from the original (PDF) on 5 October 2013, retrieved 8 February 2014
  2. ^ 30 & 31 Vict, c.40; National Archives, WORK 11/2/3 and 4, WORK 11/63, WORK 6/447.
  3. ^ London Metropolitan Archives, LCC/CL/IMP/01/048, letter from First Commissioner of Works, 23 Feb 1900.
  4. ^ "VICTORIA EMBANKMENT EXTENSION AND ST. JOHN'S IMPROVEMENT BILL". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). 26 April 1898. Retrieved 14 September 2008.
  5. ^ LMA, LCC/CL/IMP/01/048.
  6. ^ LMA, LCC/CL/IMP/01/048, letters from First Commissioner of Works.
  7. ^ 63 & 64 Vict, c.269, s.8.
  8. ^ National Archives, WORK 16/826; LCC minutes, Jan-June 1914, p. 122.
  9. ^ "Corporation of London". The National Archive. Archived from the original on 10 August 2012. Retrieved 14 September 2008.
  10. ^ "Westminster changes in 1905". Oxford Journals. 7 April 1906. Retrieved 10 July 2017.
  11. ^ National Archives, WORK 16/826; 1914 Ordnance Survey map.
  12. ^ National Archives, WORK 16/1940 and 1941, HLG 126/290.
  13. ^ Hope, Christopher (14 April 2017). "Row over new £50m holocaust memorial as MPs say it will ruin Victoria Tower Garden". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 3 September 2018.
  14. ^ Hansard, PM's Questions, Q1.
  15. ^ "Adjaye Associates and Ron Arad Architects win UK Holocaust Memorial international design competition". UK Government website. Retrieved 24 October 2017.
  16. ^ "Save Victoria Tower Gardens". Save Victoria Tower Gardens. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  17. ^ "UNESCO Advisor Objects to Memorial". Jewish Chronicle. Retrieved 25 June 2019.
  18. ^ Durbin, Adam (8 April 2022). "Holocaust memorial: Planning permission for Parliament monument quashed". BBC News. Retrieved 21 April 2022.

External links edit

  • Boundary Commission map from 1885
  • Waterloo, Westminster, Lambeth map 1896
  • Save Victoria Tower Gardens
  • High Court judgement of 8 April 2022

51°29′49″N 0°7′30″W / 51.49694°N 0.12500°W / 51.49694; -0.12500