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Congress House

Building in London, England


Summary

Building in London, England

FieldValue
imageWestminster, Congress House - geograph.org.uk - 1402489.jpg
nameCongress House
captionCongress House
locationGreat Russell Street, Holborn, London WC1B 3LS, England
completion_date1958
architectDavid du Roi Aberdeen
embedyes
designation1Grade II* Listed Building
designation1_offnameCongress House, including forecourt and courtyard sculptures
designation1_date29 March 1988
designation1_number

Congress House is the headquarters of the Trades Union Congress (TUC), a British organisation that represents most of the UK's trade unions. It is also an events venue, Congress Centre.

In 1948, David du Roi Aberdeen won an architectural competition to design the new TUC headquarters building in Great Russell Street, London. Staff began to move into the offices in 1956. Congress House was officially opened on 27 March 1958 along with the unveiling of a giant pietà-style statue of a woman holding her dead son. Carved in place in the internal courtyard by Jacob Epstein, it was intended as a memorial to the dead trade unionists of both world wars.

The front of the building is dominated by a bronze sculpture by Bernard Meadows representing the spirit of trade unionism with the strong helping the weak. The main facing material of the façade is polished grey Cornish granite.

Congress House was one of the earliest post-war buildings to be listed, at Grade II*, in 1988.

In 2015, an ETFE roof was installed over the internal courtyard which enabled the glass roof of the conference centre below to be reinstated and affords protection to the Epstein statue.

In 2018, an extensive redevelopment of the rear of the building was carried out, creating a new entrance, reception, offices and staff facilities. Known as 'The Rookery', the new development includes a public artwork by German artist Eva Berendes inspired by traditional trade union badges.

References

References

  1. [http://www.tuc.org.uk/the_tuc/tuc-7646-f0.cfm] {{webarchive. link. (December 5, 2010)
  2. "The Union Makes Us Strong – TUC History Online". Unionhistory.info.
  3. (1956-10-12). "Pleasing facade of the new T.U.C. building". [[The Times]].
  4. "Congress House".
  5. {{NHLE
  6. Architects, Hugh Broughton. "TUC Congress House {{!}} Hugh Broughton Architects".
  7. "Home".
  8. Architects, Hugh Broughton. "TUC Congress House {{!}} Hugh Broughton Architects".
  9. "Eva Berendes".
  10. "Home".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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