Hello Please sign in. New Customer? Start here.
Paddington Station

Paddington Station

Its history and architecture

Product Code: 51175
£8.99
Qty
Product overviewAdditional informationCustomer reviewsEmail a friend

Read this book because it is about passion for Brunel, a celebrated engineer, and a celebration of Victorian and twentieth century virtuosity of achievement. The Archaeologist The best way to approach Paddington is from its underground station. You struggle through the crowded low-ceilinged anonymity of the subways and through the ticket barrier: stairs and an escalator loom ahead. Suddenly the ceiling ends; there is an arched roof high above and, as you ascend, the whole tremendous interior reveals itself at once. You are standing in the middle of the broad central span: on a fine day light floods in from the Lawn roof behind and the delicate tracery at the far end is silhouetted. The milling crowds, the long perspective, the waiting trains and the light in the distance produce an atmosphere of expectation  the experience of travel heightened here in a way that few other British stations can match. It is one of the great interiors of London. Paddington, the Great Western Railway and their principal designer, Isambard Kingdom Brunel, are at the heart of railway history. Railways were one of the defining phenomena of Victorian Britain and one of Britains many great gifts to the world, so the building of the GWR has a place in world history. This history forms the background to this book. It is an account of the building that best epitomises the GWR and its operations, a living railway station that is also a masterpiece of Victorian architecture. Paperback 174pp PUB DATE April 2006

You might also like