High Point, Bradford

High Point is a high rise former commercial building in Bradford, in West Yorkshire. It is a prominent example of Brutalist architecture.

High Point
High Point in May 2012
General information
StatusExtant
TypeBank headquarters
Architectural styleBrutalist
AddressProvidence Street, Queensbury, Bradford, BD1
Town or cityBradford
CountryWest Yorkshire
Completed1972
ClientYorkshire Building Society
Design and construction
Architecture firmJohn Brunton Partnership

History

High Point was built as the headquarters of the Yorkshire Building Society and completed in 1972.[1][2] The building had become unused for several decades prior to the 2010s. An informal panel discussion on High Point in March 2018 included participants from the Bradford Civic Society, the Director of the Twentieth Century Society, Catherine Croft, and the architectural critic and historian Simon Jenkins. The non-binding discussion ended with a resolution to seek a new use for the building.[3] Croft said that buildings such as High Point demonstrate "how cities have evolved" and that by "trying to erase the legacy of brutalism you are simplifying the history of a city".[2] Jenkins felt that the Brutalist style of Highpoint was "F-you architecture" intended as a political statement by its architects as opposed to an aesthetic that they themselves would personally utilise.[2] 78% of respondents to a 2018 poll run by a local newspaper, the Telegraph & Argus said that High Point should be demolished.[2]

An illegal rave attracted 500 revellers to the High Point in March 2010 before it was broken up by police.[4]

Design

High Point is a prominent example of Brutalist architecture.[2] It was designed by the John Brunton Partnership of Bradford.[5] It is 8 storeys in height and is noted for its use of ribbed concrete.[3] George Sheeran, writing in Bradford in 50 Buildings, describes the "long narrow windows, like arrow slits, giving the appearance of a castle keep" unconsciously implying the surety of the Yorkshire Building Society's loans and investments. The extreme height of the building in comparison to its neighbours can cause excessive wind turbulence.[1] In his A Guide to the New Ruins of Great Britain, Owen Hatherley describes High Point as "utterly freakish, the severed head of some Japanese giant robot clad in a West Yorkshire stone aggregate".[6]

High Point was one of a trifecta of headquarters of building societies built in the brutalist style at the time of its construction in Northern England. The other two were the headquarters of the Halifax Building Society designed by the Building Design Partnership in Halifax and the head offices of Bradford & Bingley Building Society in Bingley designed by JBP.[3] The Twentieth Century Society described the three buildings as representing in retrospect "the last-gasp of a sort of Heath-Wilsonian regional resurgence, at a time when "financial services" were not synonymous with the corporate casino-ism of the City of London, but a flourishing of century-old Victorian independent mutuals, and northern self-sufficiency".[5] High Point was included in Brutal North: Post-War Modernist Architecture in the North of England, Simon Phipps's photographic study of Brutalist architecture.[7]

References

  1. George Sheeran (15 September 2017). Bradford in 50 Buildings. Amberley Publishing. p. 98. ISBN 978-1-4456-6849-9.
  2. Brad Deas (4 December 2018). "High Point building, Bradford from the inside". The Telegraph and Argus. Retrieved 4 January 2020.
  3. Jim Dunton (12 March 2018). "Bradford backs saving brutalist landmark". Building Design. Retrieved 4 January 2020.
  4. Tanya O'Rouke (1 March 2010). "Police swoop on Bradford building". Telegraph & Argus. Retrieved 4 January 2020.
  5. "Building of the month: December 2014 - Bradford & Bingley Building Society, Bingley". Twentieth Century Society. Retrieved 4 January 2020.
  6. Christopher Hirst (23 October 2011). "A Guide to the New Ruins of Great Britain, By Owen Hatherley". The Independent. Retrieved 4 January 2020.
  7. Lanre Bakare (3 January 2020). "Destruction of brutalist architecture in north of England prompts outcry". The Guardian. Retrieved 3 January 2020.
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