k Commonwealth Institute, Kensington High Street, Kensington, London, 06041962. Creator John Laing plc. Commonwealth Institute, Kensington High Street, Kensington, London, 06041962. A worker installing window frames in the clerestory between the central and outer roof sections of the exhibition hall at the Commonwealth Institute. Laing built the Commonwealth Institute between October 1960 and October 1962 to replace the former Imperial Institute that was to be demolished to make way for new facilities at Imperial College. The building consisted of a fourstorey administrative block housing a library, restaurant, board room and conference hall and a separate twostorey block containing a cinema with an art gallery above, but the focus of the project was the exhibition hall with its hyperbolic paraboloid roof, the first of its kind constructed in Great Britain. The exhibition, designed by James Gardner, provided spaces where each of the Commonwealth nations could showcase their achievements and characteristics, primarily to school children as teaching aids to enliven history and geography lessons. The shell arch of the central roof section was of reinforced concrete, cast in situ using timber formwork with rough sawn boards to provide a textured internal surface whilst the four outer quotwarpsquot were constructed using precast beams and wood wool slabs, blocks of shredded timber bound together in a cement paste and left visible from the interior. The entire roof was then clad in copper sheeting over a layer of vermiculite. It covers an area of 33,700sqft, 183 feet square with the central section 93 feet square and ranges between 30ft high at its lowest and 80ft at the peaks. Editorial Stock Photo - Afloimages
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Commonwealth Institute, Kensington High Street, Kensington, London, 06 04 1962. Creator: John Laing plc. Commonwealth Institute, Kensington High Street, Kensington, London, 06 04 1962. A worker installing window frames in the clerestory between the central and outer roof sections of the exhibition hall at the Commonwealth Institute. Laing built the Commonwealth Institute between October 1960 and October 1962 to replace the former Imperial Institute that was to be demolished to make way for new facilities at Imperial College.  The building  consisted of a four storey administrative block housing a library, restaurant, board room and conference hall and a separate two storey block containing a cinema with an art gallery above, but the focus of the project was the exhibition hall with its hyperbolic paraboloid roof, the first of its kind constructed in Great Britain.  The exhibition, designed by James Gardner, provided spaces where each of the Commonwealth nations could showcase their achievements and characteristics, primarily to school children as teaching aids to enliven history and geography lessons. The shell arch of the central roof section was of reinforced concrete, cast in situ using timber formwork with rough sawn boards to provide a textured internal surface whilst the four outer  quot warps quot  were constructed using precast beams and wood wool slabs, blocks of shredded timber bound together in a cement paste and left visible from the interior.  The entire roof was then clad in copper sheeting over a layer of vermiculite.  It covers an area of 33,700sqft, 183 feet square with the central section 93 feet square and ranges between 30ft high at its lowest and 80ft at the peaks.
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Commonwealth Institute, Kensington High Street, Kensington, London, 06/04/1962. Creator: John Laing plc.

Commonwealth Institute, Kensington High Street, Kensington, London, 06/04/1962. A worker installing window frames in the clerestory between the central and outer roof sections of the exhibition hall at the Commonwealth Institute. Laing built the Commonwealth Institute between October 1960 and October 1962 to replace the former Imperial Institute that was to be demolished to make way for new facilities at Imperial College. The building consisted of a four-storey administrative block housing a library, restaurant, board room and conference hall and a separate two-storey block containing a cinema with an art gallery above, but the focus of the project was the exhibition hall with its hyperbolic paraboloid roof, the first of its kind constructed in Great Britain. The exhibition, designed by James Gardner, provided spaces where each of the Commonwealth nations could showcase their achievements and characteristics, primarily to school children as teaching aids to enliven history and geography lessons. The shell arch of the central roof section was of reinforced concrete, cast in situ using timber formwork with rough sawn boards to provide a textured internal surface whilst the four outer "warps" were constructed using precast beams and wood wool slabs, blocks of shredded timber bound together in a cement paste and left visible from the interior. The entire roof was then clad in copper sheeting over a layer of vermiculite. It covers an area of 33,700sqft, 183 feet square with the central section 93 feet square and ranges between 30ft high at its lowest and 80ft at the peaks.

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178610409

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Editorial

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Creation date
18-01-2022

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