Paternoster Vents | |
---|---|
Artist | Thomas Heatherwick |
Year | 2002 |
Type | Sculpture |
Medium | Stainless steel |
Location | London, United Kingdom |
51°30′52″N0°06′02″W / 51.514339°N 0.100462°W |
Paternoster Vents, sometimes referred to as simply Vents [1] [2] [3] [4] and also known as Angel's Wings, [5] [6] is an outdoor 2002 stainless steel sculpture by Thomas Heatherwick, installed Paternoster Lane on the west side of the Paternoster Square development in London, United Kingdom, close to the junction of Warwick Lane and Ave Maria Lane with Amen Corner. [7] The sculpture provides ventilation for an underground electrical substation. [1] [7]
It has been described by The Guardian as "one of Thomas Heatherwick’s earliest and most successful projects". [8] It won Design and Art Directions' "wood pencil" award for design in 2002. [9]
The sculpture was commissioned by Stanhope and Mitsubishi Estate, who jointly developed the Paternoster Square site, to provide ventilation for a subsurface electrical substation with four electricity transformers under Bishop’s Court on the west side of the development. Thomas Heatherwick's design reduces the physical mass of the structure as originally conceived, with metal grilles integrated into the paving allow ingress of cool air, with warm air flowing out through the two tall vents which form wings that mirror each other. Each wing comprises 63 isosceles triangles of stainless steel about 6 mm (0.24 in) thick, assembled into a monocoque helical form that stands about 11 m (36 ft) high. The design was inspired by origami experiments from folding pieces of A4 paper. The outer surface was given a satin finish by shot blasting with glass beads.
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Paternoster Square is a former historic square, renamed from Newgate Market c. 1872, and now a post-war urban redevelopment, owned by the Mitsubishi Estate, next to St Paul's Cathedral in the City of London. The area, previously named Paternoster Row, after the street of the same name, once centre of the London publishing trade, was devastated by aerial bombardment in The Blitz during World War II. It is now the location of the London Stock Exchange which relocated there from Threadneedle Street in 2004. It is also the location of investment banks such as Goldman Sachs, Merrill and Nomura Securities, and of fund manager Fidelity Investments. The square itself, i.e. the plaza, is privately owned public space. In 2004, Christopher Wren's 1669 Temple Bar Gate was re-erected here as an entrance way to the plaza.
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