Winter 199718
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-c e g NEW BUILDING FOR e 40 BIOCHEMISTRY ffi' A quarterly review of current a rch itectu ra l, u rba n ist a nd e nvi ro n menta I issues a nd events in the Cambridge area produced by the Cambridge Associ ati o n of Arch itects.
There have been many changes on Tennis Court Road in recent years and several notable examples of Cambridge new architecture are now strung along it. We have Quinlan Terry's classicism at Downing, preceded by the altogether more subtle classicism of Howell's S.C.R. for the same college. There is Outram being eccentric at the Judge and Parry's carefully wrought homage to Terragni now revealed at Pembroke. The road is sometimes described as canyon-like but on the Downing side the buildings are well set back, it is the high wall and trees which crowd the road.
On the west side the buildings do tend to dominate, none more so than the Pharmacology Depadment, a cheap but unfofiunately far from cheerful building by J.T. Design and Build which appeared after the controversial rejection of Colquhoun & Miller's competition winning scheme in 1986. When the J.T. building was extended to form the Wellcome/CRC lnstitute again D&B was the preferred method and the developer's architect Sid Furness was not really given the chance to improve things. The hope that the Old Addenbrookes
site could become a new, architecturally exciting University complex was rapidly fading. When the Biochemistry Department sought to develop their plot at the south end of Tennis Court Road the City planners, concerned about the visual impact of continuing with more of the same, persuaded the University to
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