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The Structural Engineer, Volume 78, Issue 4, 2000
The Tate Gallery of Modern Art at Bankside, London, now named ‘Tate Modern’, is one of the most important public buildings to be realised in England at the end of the 20th century. The project has transformed Giles Gilbert Scott’s grand power station into a vast art gallery, which will contribute to the resurgence of the London Borough of Southwark. From the outside, Bankside looks remurkably similar today to when it operated as a power station, apart from a certain amount of repair and a new glass-clad ‘beam’ appearing above the old roof line. This paper tells the story of how 300 OOO ft² of new, highly serviced floors were nested within the original enclosure. J.G. Hirst, F.H. Wainwright and J.M. Shaw
Mr G. A. Rankine (M) (Becket Rankine Partnership) I would like to congratulate Dr Chapman on an excellent talk on a most critical and important subject.