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The battle for Bankside: electricity, politics and the plans for post-war London

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 November 2017

STEPHEN MURRAY*
Affiliation:
5 Balmoral Gardens, Hockley, Essex, SS5 4UN, UK

Abstract:

In the mid-1940s a conflict arose – the battle for Bankside – between two plans for a contested space on London's South Bank. The electricity industry planned to rebuild Bankside power station to alleviate a critical shortage of electricity, whereas the County of London Plan envisaged redevelopment of the area as public gardens, flats and offices. This article examines these plans and their entanglement in the planning system as then constituted; it argues that the significance of the planning principles escalated the arguments from a local issue to the highest level of government. The roles of key actors who manoeuvred to influence the decision-making process are explored. The article demonstrates that the power station approval was crisis driven and imposed ill-considered conditions with long-term implications. Elements of the County of London Plan were realized through deindustrialization and the transformation of the long-derelict power station into Tate Modern in 2000.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2017 

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References

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12 The National Archives (TNA) HLG 79/916, Ministry of Town and Country Planning, Bankside power station development Southwark: application to minister, letter from the LCC to the Ministry of Town and Country Planning, 3 Sep. 1945.

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49 Ibid., letter from the electricity commissioners to the Ministry of Town and Country Planning, 29 Jan. 1947, paragraphs 1 and 11.

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56 Ibid., personal note from prime minister to the minister of fuel and power, 15 Mar. 1947.

57 Another context for Attlee's question was the government's coal-to-oil conversion programme for industry in response to the national shortage of coal. See TNA POWE 14/494, conversion of power station boilers from coal to oil firing, letter from the CEB to the Ministry of Fuel and Power, 22 Jul. 1946.

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67 Ibid., letter from Lord Latham to Herbert Morrison, 2 May 1947.

68 Ibid., letter from Lewis Silkin to Herbert Morrison, 6 May 1947.

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71 TNA HLG 79/917, letter from J. Hacking to Sir John Kennedy, 15 May 1947.

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73 George Isaacs was the minister of labour and national service and MP for Southwark North where Bankside was located.

74 TNA CAB 128/9, cabinet minutes, 22 May 1947, CM (47)49, fol. 49.

75 HC Debates, vol. 437, cols. 2688–725, 23 May 1947; Silkin's comments are at col. 2717.

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81 TNA POWE 14/1116, Ministry of Power, siting of new power stations: extension to Bankside Borough of Southwark, letter from the CEGB to the Ministry of Power, 18 Apr. 1958. The Ministry of Fuel and Power was renamed the Ministry of Power in 1957. The BEA was reformed as the Central Electricity Authority in 1955 then as the CEGB in 1958.

82 Ibid., letter from the CEGB to the architect to the LCC, 27 Jun. 1958.

83 Ibid., Ministry of Power, form of consent, 7 Aug. 1958.

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