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Children's playgrounds

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Churchill Gardens Estate, Pimlico, London: the playground and the heat-accumulator

RIBA74127
Powell & Moya
NOTES: This, the largest housing scheme by Westminster City Council, was built in four sections between 1946 and 1962.

Churchill Gardens Estate, Pimlico, London: the children's playground with the heat-accumulator behind

RIBA74130
Powell & Moya
NOTES: This, the largest housing scheme by Westminster City Council, was built in four sections between 1946 and 1962.

Housing, Henley Road, Coventry: the children's playground

RIBA75335
Coventry City Architects Department
NOTES: These dwellings received the RIBA Architecture award in 1971 for the West Midlands region.

Housing, Henley Road, Coventry: the children's playground

RIBA75336
Coventry City Architects Department
NOTES: These dwellings received the RIBA Architecture award in 1971 for the West Midlands region.

Housing, Kildrum 1, Cumbernauld New Town: the toddlers' playground

RIBA76039
Cumbernauld Development Corporation
NOTES: Created as a population overspill for Glasgow City, Cumbernauld was designated a new town in 1955. Leslie Hugh Wilson was the first Chief Architect to the Cumbernauld Development Corporation (CDC) which oversaw the development, promotion and management of the New Town until 1996. He was succeeded in 1962 by Dudley Roberts Leaker.

Churchill Gardens Estate, Pimlico, London

RIBA77040
Powell & Moya
NOTES: This, the largest housing scheme by Westminster City Council, was built in four sections between 1946 and 1962.

Pimlico Secondary School, Lupus Street, Westminster, London

RIBA80106
Bancroft, John (1928-2011)
NOTES: This co-educational comprehensive school for 1725 pupils occupied a four and a half acre rectangular site bound by streets on all four sides, which was well below the standard for a school of this size. It stood approximately ten feet below the road surface at the level of the basements and gardens of the houses that originally occupied the site. The demolition of this controversial school began in 2008 to make way for a new school campus. The architect for the school was John Bancroft.

Pimlico Secondary School, Lupus Street, Westminster, London

RIBA80107
Bancroft, John (1928-2011)
NOTES: This co-educational comprehensive school for 1725 pupils occupied a four and a half acre rectangular site bound by streets on all four sides, which was well below the standard for a school of this size. It stood approximately ten feet below the road surface at the level of the basements and gardens of the houses that originally occupied the site. The demolition of this controversial school began in 2008 to make way for a new school campus. The architect for the school was John Bancroft.

Pimlico Secondary School, Lupus Street, Westminster, London: the north elevation with St Saviour's Church in the background

RIBA80108
Bancroft, John (1928-2011)
NOTES: This co-educational comprehensive school for 1725 pupils occupied a four and a half acre rectangular site bound by streets on all four sides, which was well below the standard for a school of this size. It stood approximately ten feet below the road surface at the level of the basements and gardens of the houses that originally occupied the site. The demolition of this controversial school began in 2008 to make way for a new school campus. The architect for the school was John Bancroft.
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