The Life and Death of London's Crystal Palace (2021)

heritagecalling.com

52 points by zeristor 6 days ago


andybak - 2 days ago

Back in my school days it was on my route home and I used to break into the site (it was fenced off at the time).

It felt so mysterious and strange. Headless statues, vast empty terraces - the old high level station ticket hall passed under a main road and come out the other side with a view of a huge railway tunnel blocked with an old wrought iron fence.

It's been cleaned up and opened to the public since then - which is almost a shame.

pm215 - 2 days ago

There's a little free-entry one-or-two-room museum on the site: https://www.crystalpalacemuseum.org.uk/ (though ironically it is currently closed due to fire damage; normally open on Sunday afternoons) which has some photographs and various bits of memorabilia relating to the building. If you're planning on wandering down to the site and looking at the dinosaurs, it's worth dropping in here too.

kitd - 2 days ago

Remains are visible here:

https://www.google.com/maps/@51.4226201,-0.0739698,953m/data...

walthamstow - 2 days ago

Looking at the badge of Crystal Palace FC, I guess those towers either side are the water towers mentioned in the piece?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crystal_Palace_F.C.#/media/Fil...

ggm - 6 days ago

My Dad had a lump of fused glass scavenged from the fire site, which he lost in the blitz when the family home in Stepney was bombed out. I bet a lot of London kids had souvenirs like this.

ionwake - 2 days ago

alas it no longer exists, all that remains is a steep hill and a park. within that park are some plastic dinosaur, where I found out for the first time my gf from arizona didnt believe in evoluion. Not that I had a problem with it, its just my only memory of what must have been an amazing place.

nosianu - 2 days ago

It is linked on the submitted page, but since not everybody checks every link, I would like to point to these 47 wonderful enhanced images at https://historicengland.org.uk/images-books/photos/results/?...

It took me a few seconds of confusion, each image is on its own page and tiny - you need to click on the "Full Screen" icon in the upper right corner of that tiny image to see the full quality.

ajb - 2 days ago

This page has an illustration from that strange interlude during which photographs weren't mass-reproducible, so the image had to be manually engraved on a wooden printing plate to be reproduced.

"Our image above isn’t a photograph but a print made from an engraving, made from a daguerreotype – one of the first photographic processes. Engravings could easily be printed multiple times and used to illustrate books, whereas photographs could not. "

ajb - 2 days ago

This page has one image from the curious interval, during which it was possible to take photos, but not to mass - reproduce them; so to do so a photo was manually transferred by an engraver to a wooden printing plate.

I wonder what things we do we today will seem as anachronistic.

jemmyw - 2 days ago

I visited the site many times with my dad. I wonder why the building seemed to susceptible to fire, given that it was a metal and glass construction? Was is it the nature of the exhibits?

It's a shame they didn't rebuild it in the 60s.

mikepurvis - 2 days ago

The opening chapter of Bill Bryson's wonderful At Home has a bit about the Crystal Palace:

> The Crystal Palace was at once the world’s largest building and its lightest, most ethereal one. Today we are used to encountering glass in volume, but to someone living in 1851 the idea of strolling through cubic acres of airy light inside a building was dazzling— indeed, giddying. The arriving visitor’s first sight of the Exhibition Hall from afar, glinting and transparent, is really beyond our imagining. It would have seemed as delicate and evanescent, as miraculously improbable, as a soap bubble. To anyone arriving at Hyde Park, the first sight of the Crystal Palace, floating above the trees, sparkling in sunshine, would have been a moment of knee-weakening splendor.

https://www.penguinrandomhouse.ca/books/20575/at-home-by-bil...