Conserving Dirty Concrete: The Decline and Rise of Pasmore's Apollo Pavilion, Peterlee

The Apollo Pavilion, Peterlee, is a large sculpture built to the designs of artist Victor Pasmore. Always controversial, the pavilion has been under threat for much of its life. However, it is recently restored and in December 2011 it was granted Grade II* listing. This might be seen as a story of an artwork and monument rescued from ruin by an artistic and cultural elite similar to the one which created it, as part of a wider “authorized heritage discourse” that has sought to revalorize avant-garde modernist structures despite public hostility. However, the paper argues that the pavilion also needs to be understood in other ways. First, the impetus for creating a positive future for the pavilion has been generated locally. Second, there is a need to understand it in the wider context of the landscape in which it sits; as the visual culmination of an ambitious collaboration between artist and architect. Third, the pavilion should be seen as a monument embodying progressive values, as part of the post-war settlement that strove to create better living environments for all. Fourth, it is argued, it is an object that will continue to provoke, rather than becoming part of a warm, comforting blanket of heritage.

[1]  G. J. Ashworth Editorial: On Icons and ICONS , 2006 .

[2]  James Curl,et al.  The Practice of Modernism: Modern Architects and Urban Transformation, 1954-1972 by John R. Gold (Abingdon & New York 2007) (Book Review) , 2009 .

[3]  Barry Goodchild,et al.  Britain's New Towns: Garden Cities to Sustainable Communities , 2011 .

[4]  Paul Usherwood Victor Pasmore's Peterlee Pavilion and the 'publicness' of public sculpture. , 2002 .

[5]  Gregory Ashworth,et al.  A geography of heritage , 2000 .

[6]  Adrian Forty,et al.  Concrete and memory , 2005 .

[7]  Peter J. Larkham,et al.  People, planning and place: The roles of client and consultants in reconstructing post-war Bilston and Dudley , 2006 .

[8]  Manik Deepak Gopinath [Book Review] Anthony Alexander Britain’s New Towns: Garden Cities to Sustainable Communities. Abingdon: Routledge, 2009 , 2011 .

[9]  John Allan,et al.  Private privilege—public duty: examples of recent English experience in modern conservation , 2010 .

[10]  Arnold Whittick,et al.  New towns: Their origins, achievements, and progress , 1977 .

[11]  D. Matless,et al.  Re-forming Britain: Narratives of Modernity before Reconstruction , 2008 .

[12]  Mark Crinson Urban Memory - An Introduction , 2005 .

[13]  J. Tunbridge,et al.  Dissonant Heritage: The Management of the Past as a Resource in Conflict , 1995 .

[14]  Laurajane Smith Uses of Heritage , 2020, Encyclopedia of Global Archaeology.

[15]  Aidan While,et al.  Modernism vs Urban Renaissance: Negotiating Post-war Heritage in English City Centres , 2006 .

[16]  Eugene Rosenberg,et al.  Architect's choice: Art in architecture in Great Britain since 1945 , 1992 .

[17]  John Pendlebury,et al.  Social Housing as Heritage: The Case of Byker, Newcastle upon Tyne , 2009 .

[18]  Elizabeth Darling,et al.  Re-forming Britain: Narratives of Modernity before Reconstruction , 2006 .

[19]  Alison Ravetz,et al.  Remaking Cities : Contradictions of the Recent Urban Environment , 1980 .

[20]  John Pendlebury Preserving Post-War Heritage: The Care and Conservation of Mid-Twentieth-Century Architecture , 2002 .

[21]  P. Oliver The Power of Place; Urban Landscapes as Public History , 1996 .

[22]  Garry Philipson,et al.  Aycliffe and Peterlee New Towns, 1946-1988 : swords into ploughshares and farewell squalor , 1988 .

[23]  Mark Crinson,et al.  Urban memory : history and amnesia in the modern city , 2005 .

[24]  Aidan While,et al.  The State and the Controversial Demands of Cultural Built Heritage: Modernism, Dirty Concrete, and Postwar Listing in England , 2007 .

[25]  Emma Waterton,et al.  In the spirit of self-mockery? Labour heritage and identity in the Potteries , 2011 .

[26]  John R. Gold,et al.  The Practice of Modernism: Modern Architects and Urban Transformation, 1954–1972 , 2007 .

[27]  John Allan,et al.  Lubetkin and Peterlee , 2005 .

[28]  Elain Harwood Keeping the past in England: the history of post-war listing , 2010 .