August 2008


Such a crass waist of a building, what the cost to clear and repair bring up to date? what cost to ensure people like can not just enter, i might have been one of those people who have trashed this place, yes i did see the crack pipes full of bread..

I was in awe and fear of this place, stood there rooted the spot my first time, what it be if you have swam there to see her is this state.

Swimming is generally recognised as one of the best ‘all-round’ forms of exercise and can be enjoyed by everyone, regardless of their age or ability.

There are 18 swimming pools in Leeds run by the sport and active recreation service. Contact details and facilities available are detailed below. For individual swimming pool timetables, opening times or alternative contact details (email and fax numbers) please use the relevant page links on this page.

Swimming lessons are available at all the following pools. Water babies is the first of our swimming lessons for children from 4 months to 3 years old. Water babies classes are designed for both parents/adults and their babies to give them a safe and enjoyable first experience of the swimming pool.

Children’s swimming lessons are run on a school term basis and must be booked and paid for in advance. Holiday swimming lesson courses are also run during the main school holidays.

Adult lessons are usually on a session basis. For more information on swimming lessons please contact your local leisure centre.

The International Pool was designed by the architect John Poulson and was completed in September 1967.

The building was an innovative design incorporating sharp concrete lines and large expanses of glazing within a lightweight framework of steel. The building s a dramatic building, strongly geometric, uncompromising in character, and a landmark for the city. These attributes are offset by its harsh concrete and inhospitable external spaces, its value as a piece of Leeds 1960’s architecture is second to none.

The International pool has never lived up to it’s full potential over the years. Originally the Pool would be built to Olympic standards. However, in order to cut costs, Poulson was asked to reduce the width of the tank in his design.

It was the decision of the Council to reduce the design width of the pool which led to rumours that the pool was not big enough for competitions, a myth which has been chinese-whispered into a number of variations, the most prevalent, but incorrect, being the pool was 1 inch to short when the tiles were added.

Unlike many of Poulsons buildings, The Leeds International pool showed considerable design flair and imagination. Even today, after years of neglect, the Pool hall itself is a stunning space. The building won a national Civic Trust award in 1969. The diving board is a spectacular work of art with 3, 5, 7 and 10m boards 1 and 3m springboards.

The aim of these images is just to show a crass waist of a resource, when we are hosting for the Olympics of 2012.

an artist mock up showing a large white object suspended over a swimming pool

Image courtesy Leeds City Council/OSA

With its bold 1960s styling, Leeds International Pool has been loved and loathed by local people in equal measure, but now, prior to a major redevelopment, it is to be transformed into an iconic temporary artwork.

The pool has been a controversial building and an integral part of the cityscape of Leeds for the past four decades; now the disused sports complex is to become the site of an ambitious installation created by acclaimed international artists and architects OSA (Office for Subversive Architecture).

OSA are hosting The Accumulator, which will transform the building into a virtual water collector via a huge textile funnel in the building’s central glazed roof space.

Visitors will be able to walk around the dry pool floor and sit on red seating dotted about from the former public viewing areas to take a look at the installation from the inside. It will also be illuminated at night.

Leeds artist Pippa Hale will contribute an installation called Pool which includes a series of projections showing people engaged in a range of activities associated with the building, from learning to swim to taking a bath. Her work is designed as a celebration of the building and the different communities that have used it over the years.

For Leeds council, who are backing both of the artworks, the project is a way of raising the city’s profile on the international stage.

“Leeds is an international city capable of attracting the best international talent and the OSA collaboration certainly demonstrates that, ably supported by one of our best local artists,” said Cllr Andrew Carter, Leeds City Council Leader and executive member for Development.

“If we are to be a serious player on the international stage we must make bold statements like this which prove we can compete with other major European cities- not only in business, tourism and sport but also the arts and other public arenas.”

The Accumulator, photo © Phil Day, 2008.

a large white object suspended over a swimming pool
more

http://www.24hourmuseum.org.uk/nwh_gfx_en/ART54113.html

Read a good history and view more images here

http://www.flickr.com/photos/phill_dvsn/sets/72157604030812905/

See the rest of my images here

http://www.flickr.com/photos/0742/sets/72157606565537237/

Members of the DPM crew were jailed for up to 2 years for making dull shitty city scapes brighter and more colourful spaces.


As they start a prison sentence, pictures of their work are to be exhibited in a New York art gallery. So are they vandals or frustrated artists?


myspace page explaining more www.myspace.com/supportdpm

Petition to present at appeal to try and get reduced sentences here http://www.gopetition.co.uk/petitions/graffiti-artists.html

brightening up dull trains
brightening up dull trains

DPM tag
DPM tag



EIGHT men were sentenced on Friday11th June in what was one of the biggest prosecutions for graffiti the UK has ever seen.

All admitted conspiracy to cause criminal damage as part of a graffiti crew called DPM that tagged and painted trains and stations costing rail networks an estimated £1 million.

Detective Sergeant Michael Field, who led the inquiry described it as a “major crime on a vast scale”.
“Graffiti is an attack on the community and the environment,” he said. “It is anti-social and destructive and it’s a crime we take very seriously.”

Indeed, the courts took it just as seriously, with the two year investigation culminating in sentencing five members of the group to a total of eight years in prison.

On the day that the court opened its case against DPM, London’s Tate Modern was installing massive pieces of street art on the outside of their South Bank gallery to celebrate artists who made their names by ‘decorating’ streets and buildings in much the same kind of illegal activity.

Hundreds of thousands of visitors have already filed past the installations, admiring work by Blu, an Italian graffiti artist who uses buildings as “sheets of paper”, JR who illegally painted his initials around the streets of Paris and Brazilian Nunca who started tagging at the age of 12.

One member of the Tate’s audience was Ziggy Grudzinskas, a 25-year-old art student and member of DPM who alongside his friends admitted the conspiracy charge between 2004 and 2006.

“I stood there completely baffled for about an hour outside of the Tate to tell you the truth,” he said before he was sentenced to 18 months imprisonment at Southwark Crown Court.

“I quite like it but it really confused me a lot. I know that half, if not all of the graffiti that is on the Tate Modern building is done by people who do illegal graffiti or have done illegal graffiti and have made their name doing that.

“It is like they’re saying ‘yeah we’re on the edge of the law yet we’re being shown by one of the biggest galleries in London.’ And it’s sponsored by Nissan!”

According to Andrew Gillman, the 25-year-old so-called ‘main mover’ of DPM who was jailed for two years, the exhibition just highlights the mixed messages surrounding graffiti.

He said: “If you can make money from illegal graff or a gallery does it off your back, then it’s okay.

“It’s in advertising and fashion as well. There is graffiti on trainers, hoodies, hats, t-shirts, everything you can think of. People want to wear illegal graffiti that is on the trains and the street.

“How come you can wear it and buy it, use it in advertising, marketing, music and every album cover and as soon as you do it you’re f***ed, so where’s the message? If they don’t want people to be involved, don’t popularise it.”

Graffiti is so popular in fact that not only has it made its way onto the catwalk but it is now been propelled from the street into (or onto) galleries.

The Tate’s Street Art exhibition is the first major display of its kind and since its launch last month has been accompanied by street tours, workshops and even talks with professional street artists like Rough and Blek Le Rat.One, on August 15, entitled Graffiti – Utopia or a bit boring? will see critics Ossian War and Ben Lewis debating whether graffiti is “glorified vandalism or a legitimate cultural movement”.

Curator of the Street Art exhibition, Cedar Lewinsohn said: “I hope that we are there to challenge what people think about street art.”

Despite the widening debate on the value of urban art, courts are still cracking down on the artists, branding them malicious vandals.

Just weeks before DPM was sentenced, Gary ‘Daze’ Shields was given leave to appeal after being sentenced to 28 months behind bars.

On his interim release, he told the Glasgow Evening Times: “I totally understand what I did was vandalism, but I like the artistic side of it.”

Lewinsohn said: “There may be some mixed messages in society. I think the main thing is that it’s a real culture difference. In some countries it is legal and street art is more accepted. Brazil for instance is more relaxed about it. But in parts of Australia, they are like the UK and people really hate graffiti and tags on vans and trains. But in Melbourne, van drivers compete with each other as to whose is more decorated.”

Lewinsohn’s book, Street Art – The Graffiti Revolution, that accompanies his exhibition, charts the history of urban art from New York subway graffiti in the 1980s to today’s mainstream artists like Banksy, whose work is now auctioned for thousands of pounds.

Lewisohn said: “Every artist in the Street Art exhibition has made that leap into galleries, but it’s not a big leap. Although their art is available to see in the street, they also do a lot of studio practise beforehand, that is one of the main differences between street art and graffiti. Most of the artists have a studio and have gone to art school and have had their work in an exhibition.”

DPM, it seems have already made that leap despite their conviction.

An exhibition is to be launched a week after their sentence on July 19 in Soho, New York hosted by artist Elura Emerald and Hip Hop promotional company End Of The Weak.

Called DPM – Exhibit A the exhibition in the loft space in 440 Broadway in Grand Street will display large photographs of their work plus copies of their charge sheets questioning whether the young men are criminals or, in fact, artists.

Emerald said: “The exhibition in NYC is to give the recognition to the artists that I believe they deserve and to accentuate the fact that they are not at all criminals, and do not at all deserve to be put in jail for their creative force.

“I want to give them a platform to exhibit their art on a “legal” basis, and to spread the message that artists who paint on the street are merely expressing themselves through an artistic channel, it is not hurting anyone.

“I do not believe the creators of art should be punished, but appreciated and celebrated.”

End of the Weak’s Padraic Mccroudi, who last summer hosted an event in association with the Tate Modern called the Art of Freestyle, said: “Jailing artists for criminal damage, although it may seem to be a deterrent, does in fact only serve to gain kudos and notoriety for the artist.

“This in turn means that the criminal justice system in this case is fundamentally flawed and counter productive.

“It’s important that the criminal justice system, the courts, the judges, the police and the greater community understand this and that if they ever really want address graffiti as an issue then we all need to explore avenues together, avenues other than jail time.”

Many local authorities are already exploring these avenues funding street art workshops to connect with young people.

In fact, Greenwich council and Tower Hamlets commissioned DPM’s Grudzinskas and Jack Binnie, who was handed a 12 month suspended sentence, to lead summer workshops as Street Art Tutors for young and vulnerable people.

According to the references each council sent to the court to support Binney and Grudzinskas, their work with young people was “positive” and “inspirational”.

A source at Greenwich council said: “They showed the young people who aren’t able to do reading or writing that they can use artistic ways to express themselves.

“Their skills are obviously needed, it doesn’t make sense to send him down, we should use it.”

Matthew Pease, 24, and Paul Stewart, 26, also of DPM who were sentenced to 18 months and 15 months respectively, took part in a five-day workshop in the Czech Republic to work with disadvantaged youths as part of an event organised by music and art organisation Community Music (CM).

Pease said: “For the first day we got them sketching to see what they could do and tried to teach them a few different things about how to go about building up a piece.

“Gradually, through the week, we were getting them painting. By the end of the week, every single person in the class had a quite sizeable piece and a finished product.”

One member of DPM in particular made the headlines when he was hired by the BBC to tag the set of the country’s best loved soap while he was on bail.

Gillman, who worked full-time at his family-run funeral service, was commissioned to tag Tanya Branning’s ‘Booty’ nail salon in EastEnders and other parts of Albert Square.

He said: “They knew I was a writer. I said to them, the tags I am putting up, are the tags I see in London so it’s realistic. And they said ‘great, realistic tags, just what we want.’

“And they said ‘maybe you could come up with three tags for EastEnders, you know, three writers that are just around the square, you could put up East 13 crew, one could be Rocky!’
They were getting really into it.”

But DPM have vowed never to pick up a spray can again since their conviction but their friendship will clearly remain.

“It was more about friendship than graffiti,” Gillman said. “We knew what we were doing was wrong but when you are painting a piece, all your worries just fall away.

“Trains were like a moving canvass, it goes underground it goes over bridges. And if you’re standing there amongst the crowd and you see everyone looking at it, it gives you a huge feeling of gratification.

“We tried to create something that was artistic, made people look, something that’s thought provoking, makes commuters look up from their paper.

“But I don’t think I could call myself an artist, I’m a vandal, I’ve admitted that.”

DPM’s “brains of the group”, Slav Zinoviev, who was sentenced to 18 months in prison had a different opinion.

The 25-year-old, who recently graduated with a Masters in Information Technology, said: “People are not really educated on the whole graffiti thing. But now that Banksy has come around, people see it as one of the purest art forms, which it essentially is. And so to that extent I would say that I was an artist.

“To train writers, tags are actually much more valuable to the graffiti community than a Banksy painting is.
“We were all brought together by some sort of passion and this is one of the things that has created stronger bonds between us, and perhaps given us richer memories than the average person possesses.”

Sentencing, Judge Christopher Hardy said he had to acknowledge that some of the graffiti written by DPM showed “considerable talent”.

He added: “It seems to be on the way to being recognised as a valued form of art.

“But in this case, it has been sprayed all over property without their permission, that’s simply vandalism.”

Gillman, 25, of St John’s Hill, Battersea was jailed for two years; Zinoviev, of the same address, Grudzinskas, 25, and Stewart of Manor Lane, Lewisham received 18 months in jail; Pease of Manor Lane, Lewisham was jailed for 15 months.

As they were led to the cells, members of a packed public gallery shouted, ‘We love you boys, stay strong’ and applauded them until they were out of sight.

Other members of DPM, Matthew Tanti, 23, of Holmsbury Court, Upper Tooting Road, SW11 and Jack Binnie, 26, of Adelaide Avenue, Ladywell, were each sentenced to 12 months suspended for 12 months.

Alex McClelland, 24, of Croxted Road, West Dulwich was sentenced to nine months suspended for 12 months.

Outside court, Ziggy’s father Professor Gedis Grudzinskas said: “Ziggy has been sent to prison for 18 months having pleaded guilty to a crime not involving violence, terrorism, knives or drugs but vandalising public property.

“British Transport Police declined to arrest him and others when they knew they were breaking the law, presumably to develop their case for this show trial costing the tax payer thousands and thousands of pounds unnecessarily.

“Now they have sent him to jail instead of getting him to do community service for example to clean and help restore the trains and stations.
“This is not justice is it?”

zcat

HISTORY

Blackburn Meadows electricity generating station was built by the Sheffield Corporation in 1921,mainly to support the steel industry in the Lower Don Valley. The station was expanded in the 1930s, requiring the construction of Cooling Towers 6 and 7 in 1937-8 to supplement earlier square cooling towers to the north east.

These new hyperbolic shaped towers were designed by LG Mouchell and Partners. This was the same partnership responsible for the first hyperbolic cooling towers in the country (built in Liverpool in 1925) and some 150 towers subsequently built across the United Kingdom. Blackburn Meadows was one of those power stations nationalised to form part of the National Grid after the Second World War. It was decommissioned and mainly demolished in the 1970s.

ASSESSMENT

The Blackburn Meadows cooling towers are nationally rare surviving remains of pre-nationalisation large scale electricity generation. They are thought to be the only pre-1950 hyperbolic cooling towers surviving nationally, with nearly all the other 500 or so towers in the country dating to 1960or later. In addition to their early date, the association with LG Mouchell, the design features such as the banding and the thinness of the shell all give the towers interest. The addition of the spray coating of concrete following the 1964 disaster at Ferrybridge adds further interest by showing a development in the industry.

Even without the clouds of steam that signify operational examples, the cooling towers are also very prominent landmark features, providing a visual indication of the former scale and importance of the Sheffield steel industry in the Lower Don Valley.

However the two hyperbolic cooling towers are just one component of an extensive complex that formerly existed. The plant at Blackburn Meadows generated electricity by using steam turbines to turn electric generators, with the steam produced using coal fired boilers, the coal supplied by rail.

The railway system, coal handling plant, boiler complex, turbine and generating halls, as well as the switchgear for connecting the plant to the electricity grid and the earlier square cooling towers have all been lost. Water used by the steam turbines would have been maintained within a closed system, the steam leaving the turbine then passing through a condenser to change it back to hot water before being reboiled to produce steam to turn the turbine.

The cooling towers were used to cool water circulating in a separate system that was used to cool the condensers other equipment.

With the demolition of the rest of the generating station, the surviving cooling towers have lost their context so it is difficult to see how they functioned as an integrated part of a much wider plant.

Functionally, cooling towers still in use consist of far more than just the shell of the tower that survives at Blackburn Meadows. In operation, water is piped into the lower portion of the cooling tower into a complex network of pipes or troughs ending with sprinklers.

A fine mist of water is then sprayed on to a timber or asbestos lattice of staging and screens filling the lower 4-5m of the tower, with the water being cooled via natural evaporation aided by air being drawn upwards by the tower above. Any water droplets carried by this updraft are intercepted by a layer of louvers positioned above the sprinklers. In addition, operational cooling towers have a network of maintenance access ways. All bar one pipe in one of the towers has been stripped out from the cooling towers at Blackburn Meadows, leaving very little indication of how the towers actually functioned.

The Blackburn Meadows cooling towers are thus not only a very partial survival of an electricity generating station, they are also only a very partial survival of a pair of cooling towers. Even given the national context of the highly fragmentary survival of the pre-nationalisation power generation industry, designation of the Blackburn Meadows cooling towers cannot be justified.

The rest of the generating station has been lost, depriving the towers of their functional context and the loss of pipe work, staging, screens and access ways means that a highly significant part of the interest of the towers as cooling towers has also been lost.

www.tinsley-towers.org.uk/pages/english_heritage.pdf

If you’ve ever driven into Sheffield from the M1, you’ll be familiar with the Tinsley Cooling Towers – a piece of industrial landscape that’s become one of the city’s most famous landmarks. For now at least.

Three quarters of the public want them saved

The BBC online poll established www.bbc.co.uk/southyorkshire/content/image_galleries/tins… that three quarters of the public want them saved. This makes more than half a million supporters in Sheffield and Rotherham alone. E.ON’s own poll was flawed by a mix-up of criteria.

English Heritage wrote www.tinsley-towers.org.uk/pages/english_heritage.pdf that the Towers, built in 1938, are the oldest surviving hyperbolic Cooling Towers in the UK and that their prominence provides a visual indication of the former scale and importance of Sheffield’s steel industry.

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We never was going to Climate Camp with a flamethrower, it was an headline to
cause debate and it did, now do not get us started on the bullshit of
climate change, their just stormtroopers of government propaganda, the Middle
Class wanting to be victims because they assume the working class are and
this means they will be down with us, oh we did laugh at this
http://indymedia.org.uk/en/2008/08/405125.html

Going back to matilda and how this scum fucked up that project
(and any chance to appeal to anyone else outside
their cool little social club) with their lifestyle politics.

Now we know this makes us sound right wing and reactionary but think on, do
you think their actions are going to appeal to the working class see
http://projectsheffield.wordpress.com/2008/07/14/dear-camp-for-climate-action/

Is this news we think not, is this just propaganda to make us feel sorry for
a bunch of soap dodgers and the like i think so,
are not the actions of this lot anti working class?

Dave Douglass is right: Climate Campers very often completely
ignore the social aspects of what they advocate [decimation of communities etc],
and clean-coal technology does exist.

Nuff said now move on, we have given links to news from 
http://indymedia.org.uk/en/ on this as feel the issue of
building new power plants is an important one.

Lest say if, Climate Change is happening, then we are all right at the
end of the period of time when we can do something about it. 

Seriously drastic things need to happen if we are to stand any
chance of not completely fucking the planet. Those things that need to
happen are completely unacceptable to capitalism.[who i think is the best
authority on the subject] James Hansenhttp: put it well. he says
we should stop using coal now *or* worldwide make building clean-coal technology in new
power stations compulsory and close or convert all
existing coal-fired stations immediately. 

How's that for job creation in deprived communities? will the ruling
class allow this happen and eat into their profits?
we'll that's for our class to decide. 

We do realise that dismissing all climate camp types as
Middle Class Wankers who have nothing useful to say can be
seen as dangerous. it's a classic don't throw the baby
out with the bath water situation.

So will watch and read the news and keep adding
comments at http://projectsheffield.wordpress.com 
not because we agree with the politics,
but because there is a need for another point of view on this.

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