The Brutally Bonkers Architecture of Sheffield

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Bee Here Now

Bee Here Now

Күн бұрын

Everyone and their dog knows about Park Hill in Sheffield - a huge sprawling complex of flats, concrete lines, streets in the sky, urban decay and so on. But Sheffield has embraced odd, "ugly" architecture wholeheartedly over the years, leaving it as a living museum to various styles not very popular elsewhere.
One of those is Modernism, which includes everything from the University Arts Tower (with its paternoster lifts), the Moorfoot Building (resembling a giant Aztec stepped pyramid), the cold and simple Crucible Theatre (home of world snooker), and the uber-brutalist Moore Street electricity substation.
What do these buildings say about Sheffield - where its come from and where its going to - and what do they say about us?
So let's walk around Sheffield looking at mad buildings and pretend we're having a serious think about cities, architecture, nature and the human condition.

Пікірлер: 463
@johnd8538
@johnd8538 Жыл бұрын
I'm 55 born and bred in Sheffield. This film has blown me away...us sheffielders are so used to our environment we harldly bat an eyelid at it. From an outsiders point of view I can see exactly where you're coming from. When I left school in 1984 there was a load of old pubs and cobbled streets alongside the brutalist, so called modern buildings. Sheffield took a hammering in the war being a massive steel producer but as far as I know, the Germans missed their target...of the factories in the east end, and hit random areas and especially the city centre. Under the old marples pub in Fitzalan square there's 60 odd skeletons from one bombing raid....I was told they were that buried, they just threw loads of lime down to stop them decomposing. When I left school Sheffield felt hard, brutal and very left wing, union orientated. It shaped me massively as a person, gave me a lot of pride but at the same time a feeling of hopelessness, the axe had come down via Thatcher. Great music sprung up at that time.....human league, abc, heaven 17 and we had a great time tbh. The limit nightclub was amazing where all of the above played. Spent many a night off my nut on trips or whizz in there....haha....the cold war was at it's peak and Sheffield was a major target for the Russians....hence the film "threads". Love my city, it's hardness, it's down to earth-ness it's Yorkshireness.
@vinesauceobscurities
@vinesauceobscurities Жыл бұрын
I love that Threads was the movie that introduced me to Sheffield and its distinctive circa early-1980s character. As Charlie Brooker once put it, the climax of the plot inflicted upon the city "millions of pounds worth of improvement in Sheffield's architecture". 😂 One landmark this video left out and was also featured prominently in Threads is the 1977 annex of Sheffield Town Hall around the Peace Gardens, which egg carton facade clashed so aggressively against its Victorian-era counterpart that it's unforgettable. It may have evaded being reduced to rubble in a full-blown war but it couldn't escape the increasingly vocal negative reception of its strikingly brutalist architecture and met the wrecking ball in 2002. Sadly most of the buildings that have taken the place of that annex aren't quiet as memorable.
@richardsmith3585
@richardsmith3585 Жыл бұрын
@@vinesauceobscurities peace gardens was beautiful now a concrete slab full of drunks and drug addicts not to mention beggers
@LancashireLass
@LancashireLass Жыл бұрын
I like to tell myself that films like this are the reason KZbin was invented.
@1954shadow
@1954shadow Жыл бұрын
Definitely at the top of the list, for sure.
@caboozzle
@caboozzle Жыл бұрын
It actually started out as a dating site, where you would upload videos about yourself hence the name youtube
@BeeHereNowuk
@BeeHereNowuk Жыл бұрын
Thank you that's a lovely thing to say (I'm taking it as a compliment 😄)
@Bubbaburp
@Bubbaburp Жыл бұрын
@@caboozzle Incorrect. It actually started in 1983 as a video about me. People would tell me it was called “you teevee” and such. Back then there was less content but it was better quality since it consisted entirely of me, or, as other people refer to me,”you”. This is all pretty well documented on the internet.
@shazanali692
@shazanali692 Жыл бұрын
​@@caboozzle first video was me at the zoo
@mynameisjoejeans
@mynameisjoejeans Жыл бұрын
Sheffield is gorgeous: you've covered the brutalist centre; but there's also the lovely stone houses in the suburbs, and the fact that Sheffield developed as an accidental amalgamation of small coal and forging villages gives it a decentralised, community feel unlike any other city I know in the UK. Then you've got the 5 rivers confluences and 7 hills with numerous parks, creating great views for orientating yourself, giving a sense of space and local character. The brutalism also reflects the rugged feel of the local environment in the Dark Peak side of the Peak District: with its harsh, dark Gritstone edges and endless barren moors, creating strong, clear, simple shapes and lines across the landscape. The rugged terrain and brutalist buildings, giving way to large riverine areas reserved for flourishes of nature provides a unique city experience. A great example of this is the Rivelin Valley, which used to be home to several steel mills which have long since been abandoned, and has slowly been reclaimed by nature, with trees growing through the ancient industrial architecture, creating a wild, post-industrial, riparian forest nestled between suburbs. Walk up the hill either side and you're back in stone-fronted houses with views of the industrial Hillsborough area and the Peak District beyond. John Ruskin became enamoured with the valley and founded a museum nearby to house Rivelin paintings. Post-WWI, it became a retreat for soldiers with PTSD to paint and reconnect with nature. Few places manage to fuse ugly ingredients into a beautiful whole like that.
@bret075
@bret075 Жыл бұрын
very well said
@chris.fyourman2648
@chris.fyourman2648 Жыл бұрын
I nearly went to Uni in Sheffield in the 80s. When I told my mates back in Crewe where I was going to for the open day, the ones that had been were really enthused. "It's incredible", "escalators in the street", "there's this roundabout and you actually go into it and there are shops and everything". I didn't end up going Uni there and unfortunately only been back once or twice since, but always been impressed with the place and the people. Bit of a sidetrack - Sheffield's music history is at least and possibly more important than other cities e.g. Manchester, but never seems to get a look in.
@sglenny001
@sglenny001 Жыл бұрын
Any docs on Sheffield music sene to warch
@jmargarson
@jmargarson Жыл бұрын
I lived on Park Hill in the early 90's and I discovered, due to some workmen not closing an access door, that there is a huge network of utility tunnels that run below the flats with laddered risers that went all the way up to the roof. There was also another block of brutalist design flats, Kelvin Flats, not far outside the city centre that were demolished about the same time Hyde Park was.
@EuroDC1990
@EuroDC1990 Жыл бұрын
Everyone seems to love to hate Sheffield and to an extent I can certainly see why. Living there myself though, I do like Sheffield. Sadly though, a combination of poor planning, bad decisions by the council, withdrawal of funding after the 2008 crisis and the current severe lack of funding in favour of other nearby cities (looking at you, Manchester) have left Sheffield city centre very fragmented, underutilised and in places extremely unwelcoming. Possibly the very worst decision was to move the main shopping area to the Moor (which admittedly did need regeneration, but which isn't ideally located in the city) whilst ignoring areas that would have been a far better fit for a refreshed commercial centre around High Street, Castle Gate, Arundel Gate and Fargate. Essentially, moving the commercial centre to the Moor has led to one of the city's best assets - the supertram, not serving the commercial centre of the city, which is madness! It's also moved it further from the bus station and train station. Compare that to the out of town shopping centre at Meadowhall which has a fully integrated and (mostly) accessible tram, bus and train station and there's no wonder the city centre is dying. What Sheffield desperately needs is a plan and funding to make it happen, preferably quickly. There's lots of good stuff in Sheffield, but it so often feels unwelcoming or at times unsafe to get to it
@alexx123ify
@alexx123ify Жыл бұрын
fargate is a bloody mess now, they've got rid of the trees and tarmacked them over for some reason and the entire top end is surrounded by metal fencing where that monstrosity of a 'container park' was untill last month, took them a year to build it, somehow, and it didn't even last a year🤦‍♂now it'll probably take them another year to decide what to do and enevitably get rid of the fences and have nothing there as it should've been all along. council dont have a bloody clue.
@sheffsteel7
@sheffsteel7 Ай бұрын
I used to work in the University student sector 20 years ago and found that quite a lot of students remain in the city after their studies. Always remember asking a Liverpool girl. Why do you like Sheffield so much. Her reply was it has the feel of a town, she said crime seems low and people are so friendly however it has the facilities and size of a city and its location is great, close to other large cities, next to the motorway and the city is so green with parks everywhere and the Peak District right on the doorstep.
@ohthatswhygo
@ohthatswhygo Жыл бұрын
Thanks for making this great video, I work in an office near the train station and walk past the Moore Street Substation and Moorfoot building every day on my way to work. When I first moved to Sheffield I too was taken back by the architecture and I couldn't believe people could just walk past these buildings without stopping to look or comment on them. Over time though (I've lived in Sheffield for nearly a decade now) seeing the same buildings becomes routine. I see the substation, the Moorfoot, Park Hill and the Crucible constantly and they just became 'normal' and often, when I speak to Sheffield natives, the term 'eyesore' gets thrown around for them. I think its sometimes hard to appreciate architecture like this when the shock value wears off. I think this video is great because it's refreshed my perception of these buildings and I'll appreciate them again for what they are - cultural landmarks.
@richardallen144
@richardallen144 Жыл бұрын
Sorry you missed the paternoster. It's one of my fondest (or at least strangest) memories of studying in Sheffield.
@leenabalance
@leenabalance Жыл бұрын
Funfacts and memories! I lived in Hyde Park flats in 86 and have mainly and luckily lived in council housing since. Unfortunately they now badly maintained and it feels like they are waiting for them to fall down before moving us further out where the busses don't run and selling the land to developers. I love council housing and wish that more proper council housing was being built now around the city center. It's been such a blessing despite everything really
@Blind-Ghost-1980
@Blind-Ghost-1980 25 күн бұрын
Nice video. I've been in Sheffield for 11 years now, and I love the place. Home of football and snooker, and loads of decent people. A tram conversion with a complete stranger is quite normal quite often. Plenty of parks and green land to relax in. Some of the best health care in the country with it's two main hospitals and other local centres. I'm still learning about the history of the City, and so thanks for this video.
@sheffsteel7
@sheffsteel7 Ай бұрын
It’s sad when you say Sheffields most famous venue is the Lyceum Theatre home of the World Snooker Championships when Sheffield is the true home of football, the most popular sport in the world. Bramall Lane has so many football firsts, oldest stadium, hosted the 1st ever cup competition, there’s the Adelphi theatre which played a big part in football and of course Hillsboro stadium. The problem is that Sheffield…for some reason don’t wish to promote its roll in the game. At 1 point in the mid 1870’s there were 50 organised clubs playing football in Sheffield, that half of all the known clubs in the world at the time. Sheffield was the 1st place in the world to have a football culture, leagues, cup competitions, even paying customers in the Cromwell Cup.
@Blind-Ghost-1980
@Blind-Ghost-1980 25 күн бұрын
Sandygate, Hallam FC is the oldest stadium. The oldest club, Sheffield FC. Sheffield United, one of the iconic teams of modern times, and Sheffield Wednesday at Hillsborough with the old school stadium and the first cantilever stand in the country. The football history of this city is rich. I'm proud to work at Hillsborough on match days. I moved to Sheffield 11 years ago from Bradford, and I'm happy I did. I felt welcomed here straight away. Underrated City. Love it.
@grayfreeman
@grayfreeman Жыл бұрын
Absolutely love this, Ollie. One of your best, IMHO. I love Brutalism... mainly because it's so awful, but it's of our time and it's fascinating to look at and dissect. Nice one!
@mehno9077
@mehno9077 Жыл бұрын
I have lived in Sheffield for over a decade. I love here ,one of the most friendly place . I have met one the best people of my life in here . In my eyes, it's beautiful, and peaks district is cherry on the top. No doubts good and bad people are everywhere. But to be honest, I found it the most friendliest place in England.
@samhailess
@samhailess Жыл бұрын
Been living in Sheffield for a couple of years and I do think it's really beautiful in a way. The buildings in this video are some of the ugliest I've ever seen, but they are contrasted with some awesome rustic redbrick warehouses, blackened gothic churches and lots of greenery. Even though it's a fairly decently sized city, it feels small in a good way, and never as sprawling and unfriendly as cities like Manchester can seem. Whilst it is sad to see the amount of disposable, homogenous student accommodation buildings that seem to pop up in any small space, Sheffield definitely has its own vibe when you get here and is surrounded by some amazing landscapes and filled with interesting people. Coming from living in the often sterile-if-endearing, aborted attempt at utopia that is Milton Keynes, Sheffield also has its own character and is a cool place to walk about and be.
@antonycharnock2993
@antonycharnock2993 Жыл бұрын
Sheffield feels different because of its isolation. It was only because of its reputation for cutlery & steelmaking that it grew so much. It was never a major commercial city like the other big cities of the North so it never attracted all the offices & financial companies like your Manchesters or Leeds. It always kept that small town feel where everyone knew everyone and everyone is friendly. It has been called England's largest village. Unfortunately the city centre retail hasn't weathered very well not helped by the Meadowhall out of town shopping centre, but it is reinventing itself as a leisure destination with loads of food halls & bars opening up and has some really nice local neighbourhoods like Kelham Island & Ecclesall Road.
@sheffsteel7
@sheffsteel7 Ай бұрын
@@antonycharnock2993think part of the reason it has a small town feel is it’s so God damn hilly, this create natural boundaries between areas, so it does have a village mentality throughout the city.
@grahamrobinson3715
@grahamrobinson3715 Жыл бұрын
Great video, as ever. Studied at Sheffield in the early 1990s, and recall apprehensively riding the Paternoster lift over the top into the void, and wondering whether I’d ever see the light of day again. Moore Street substation revisited my nightmares for years afterwards.
@spam_slayed1481
@spam_slayed1481 Жыл бұрын
There was a Paternoster lift at Leeds Uni too. I remember the terror of using it for the first time. Half a dozen people leaping out whilst half a dozen leapt in. All about timing!
@mikeclarke3882
@mikeclarke3882 Жыл бұрын
Another great programme Ollie, thanks mate! Can't help but feel you've missed your calling....production standards are first class, and that means a great experience for plebs like me (up the workers!).
@BeeHereNowuk
@BeeHereNowuk Жыл бұрын
Nice one, thanks Mike!
@jonlee4771
@jonlee4771 Жыл бұрын
As a big fan of John Grindrod, this video is fantastic. His book Concretopia is fascinating, and touches very lovingly on places like Park Hill and talks about how beloved they were by the residents at the time. How the people who first moved in there couldn't believe the luxury they were afforded by having their own heated home, with a bathroom indoors and a fridge. It also talks about how the loss of funding, the decline of the local economy, and so on resulted in many of these developments failing. This is a very long winded way for me to say excellent video.
@BeeHereNowuk
@BeeHereNowuk Жыл бұрын
Aw thanks that's a nice compliment 👍
@Carolb66
@Carolb66 Жыл бұрын
Im from Rotherham & thought Sheffield as posh! Had some fun times in Sheffield in the 80's. ❤ once woke up on a bench in the hole in the road after a night out, happy days.😊
@Carolb66
@Carolb66 9 ай бұрын
@@sinord5288 🤣🎅👍
@Oliver14417
@Oliver14417 Жыл бұрын
The timing of the release of this video is extremely helpful with my essay on Sheffield and its post-war brutalist architecture such as Parkhill and alike
@johntucker845
@johntucker845 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this personal tour of brutalist Sheffield. Perhaps because I came of age when it was new and fashionable, I’ve always liked the best of brutalism, but then it was probably mostly downhill after Corbusier’s inspirational post war work. New York has a brutalist Family Courthouse that is anything but “family friendly.” Originally clad in forbidding black granite and looking like a science fiction nightmare, the budget-strapped city even went to the expense of resurfacing the whole thing in grey stone. The result is only slightly less unwelcoming. Thanks again!
@rosieHolliday5887
@rosieHolliday5887 Жыл бұрын
Omg I loved my home city 😍 But I moved away in '95 & wish I never did cos every time I go back I don't recognise it. Seeing old footage just feels like heartache & I'm going to say it loud & proud "I MISS THE EGG BOX & THE WEDDING CAKE" & I don't care about the haters who are glad it's all gone. Those two buildings, to me, were Sheffield ❤ & I miss that 80's / 90's gritty city. All that brutalist architecture was what Sheffield was all about at one time in it's history & it was just perfect. If you never grew up around it, you probably will never get it. But I loved it & it will always feel like I just want to pack up my bags & move back to those streets in the sky ☺
@blotski
@blotski Жыл бұрын
I have very fond memories of Sheffield. I did my PGCE there in 1980/1. We were based in the Arts Tower and I remember the paternoster very well. I was terrified of the damn thing! They used to nickname it the Socialist Republic of Sheffield and bus fares were about 5p.
@sglenny001
@sglenny001 Жыл бұрын
Socialist Republic of South Yorkshire actually but love form Doncaster
@blotski
@blotski Жыл бұрын
@@sglenny001 I stand corrected. 😂✊🏻
@sglenny001
@sglenny001 Жыл бұрын
@@blotski indeed Sheffield was always a grand city the way I see it embrace modernist Glasgow had its own new style and Sheffield had tge world of the 60s and 70s I've live in both City's both showcase there ideas well although I prefer Glasgow architecture and art I respect the ideals and dreams of Sheffield Doncaster an Great city still showcase power of speed
@alexx123ify
@alexx123ify Жыл бұрын
wish they were still 5p 😅
@JohnTaylor-bf6ll
@JohnTaylor-bf6ll Жыл бұрын
And it turned out that their so-called "new architecture" would become a worse solution than renovating the old houses that were torn down. Sheffield was by no means alone in this postwar ideology. Architecture aside, there is also a common theory that "a slum is made by the people who inhabit it". In other words, any place can be turned into a palace with the aid of money, effort and foresight.
@TheThorntonBrapper
@TheThorntonBrapper Жыл бұрын
A nicely Meades-esque feel to this. Very well produced!
@BeeHereNowuk
@BeeHereNowuk Жыл бұрын
Oh wow thank you very much!
@MundoSportiva
@MundoSportiva Жыл бұрын
I don’t know how this video found me but I’m glad it did. Keep up the great work!
@murringo9
@murringo9 Жыл бұрын
'And here's a magistrates court that hates you...' Love it!
@flippop101
@flippop101 Жыл бұрын
A great video exemplifying all that I vowed I wouldn’t create as an architect.
@TomSmith-yc5pt
@TomSmith-yc5pt 6 ай бұрын
There was also kelvin flats which stretched along langset road. Not dissimilar to park hill. I think gone in mid 90s
@maxwell5066
@maxwell5066 Жыл бұрын
Park Hill is such a wonderful building, can’t wait until the whole things renovated, phase 1 and 2 are stunning
@benofbrown
@benofbrown Жыл бұрын
Great video, enjoyed that! If you find yourself in Sheffield again make sure to visit the Moore St substation again after dark. You can also get a good view of it from Meersbrook Park. It gets all lit up with coloured lights and looks even better.
@BeeHereNowuk
@BeeHereNowuk Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the tip!
@noahkidd3359
@noahkidd3359 Жыл бұрын
I don't get why so many architects think that modern architecture is 'progress.' It's a great leap backward. Architecture has regressed. Beauty matters.
@kevinwelsh7490
@kevinwelsh7490 Жыл бұрын
you are a sentimentalist, stay away from me!
@Fr_87
@Fr_87 Жыл бұрын
@@kevinwelsh7490 you're a robotic retard, stay away from the blueprints
@ligametis
@ligametis Жыл бұрын
I disagree with you.
@Slingsby_architecture
@Slingsby_architecture Жыл бұрын
I quite agree.
@guidoguarnieri7411
@guidoguarnieri7411 Жыл бұрын
Modernist and brutal architecture doesn’t begin and end with British post war poor social housing. You can see beautiful modernist social housing in Scandinavia and you can see examples of beautiful and often grand modernist private apartment buildings all around the world,in Milan, Rio de Janeiro, Barcelona, New York. Don’t judge a whole era of architecture based on the very specific and reductive experience of the Uk with it
@circleinforthecube5170
@circleinforthecube5170 Жыл бұрын
some nice 70s american buildings too, seagram is a good example
@mkyboy
@mkyboy Жыл бұрын
My adopted hometown. Thanks for the coverage - very entertaining
@luisbeckett1
@luisbeckett1 Жыл бұрын
Mate, just got to say I'm lovin' your films, grew up in Irlam, grown up life in Chorlton, worked in Oldham and now in Mallorca for 5 years! Keep it up sunshine, you make me smile. Big Love x
@BeeHereNowuk
@BeeHereNowuk Жыл бұрын
Awesome, thank you!
@alibizzle2010
@alibizzle2010 Жыл бұрын
The paternoster in the arts tower was not fun on Monday morning with a hangover
@georgejedd
@georgejedd Жыл бұрын
Huh? Why do people have such an issue with it? 😂 I’ve used it every day for the last 3 years and it’s great
@Robdutton91
@Robdutton91 Жыл бұрын
Another brilliant video. Your sense of humour is fantastic
@BeeHereNowuk
@BeeHereNowuk Жыл бұрын
Well I try!
@redtape9484
@redtape9484 Жыл бұрын
Alright, watching this waiting for tram in Fitzalan Square feels odd..
@PZ7537
@PZ7537 Жыл бұрын
The Crucible got its partial facade reconstruction and now got its modernistic, pretty glass-panelled entrance. Park Hill Flats has undergone a major renovation and is now being "gentrified" with private housing. Blending with Modern architectural styles and aesthetics would be the future of Brutalist buildings. Only if different sectors are willing to contribute to this transformation, the image of a place and the wider city could be greatly improved. The city centre of Sheffield always has its charm and potential; unfortunately there is still a long way to compete with the giant Meadowhall just miles away.
@maddiekits
@maddiekits Жыл бұрын
I think brutalism could be interesting in a more broad application if it was accompanied by modern urban planning practices, it seem that the examples of brutalism people find most offensive have a lot to do with their disregard for the existing city design and building scale, that was common in the post war era.
@paulhorton5612
@paulhorton5612 12 күн бұрын
13:01 - but it reminds me of the lovely Yorkshire Grey pub they demolished to build it!
@deanothemanc5281
@deanothemanc5281 Жыл бұрын
Brilliant video. Brutalism architecture is bold, it might not be aesthetically pretty, but it gets your attention It's thought provoking, and that can only be a good thing. Most modern buildings quite frankly look identical, with a constant obsession with glass. Infact most modern euro cities are looking shockingly similar, its blandness its only constant. Keep up the good work fella 👍
@jacobmassey3897
@jacobmassey3897 Жыл бұрын
It's like living in a Soviet Union country 😂
@baby_joe
@baby_joe Жыл бұрын
The punk rock of architecture is a great description. I don't really like brutalism but as a punk fan I'm now a bit conflicted
@Richard-Sauce
@Richard-Sauce Жыл бұрын
I've been inside the Moore Street substation and I can tell you that its mostly empty, just one masive concrete room with no internal walls and no windows.
@antonycharnock2993
@antonycharnock2993 Жыл бұрын
Just some massive transformers and switchgear I imagine.
@ephphatha230
@ephphatha230 Жыл бұрын
I think brutalist architecture is quite cool. What I don't like is the car-centric infrastructure they built at that time where pedestrians are forced onto concrete overpasses or underpasses.
@sglenny001
@sglenny001 Жыл бұрын
Agreed sadly I feel that'd coming back to British citys
@puddinggeek4623
@puddinggeek4623 Жыл бұрын
An well made, very interesting video as always. Keep up the good work.
@BeeHereNowuk
@BeeHereNowuk Жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it
@cbrown182
@cbrown182 Жыл бұрын
I moved to Sheffield 12 years ago and I love it. It's not perfect by any means, but it's honest and is full of charm. Although it's a shame so many of the beautiful city centre buildings were lost due to WW2 bombing. The post war developments add to the cities unique architecture of the industrial cutlery works or steelwork structures, as well as victorian terraces built around the varied challenges of the cities topography. Sheffield also has so much to offer in terms of open and green spece to offset it's architecture. For example, It's the only UK city to include a national park within its boundary and it's officially the greenest city in Europe (based on trees per capita). It's very easy to forget you're in a large cosmopolitan city rather than a countryside village. Sheffield often gets unfairly compared to other local cities like Manchester or Leeds. These cities may have redeveloped further to add a fancy veneer to their city centres. But Sheffield is working to catch up and offers so much more that the others can't match for me.
@keithscothern3398
@keithscothern3398 Жыл бұрын
there are still some georgian buildings left paradise square is beautiful
@paulmitchell5349
@paulmitchell5349 Жыл бұрын
Brutalist buildings imposed by brutal capitalist regimes. The Moorfoot building blocked out the sky views from the Moor ,imported many workers from London,and did little for local employment opportunities. It still does nothing for Sheffield.. Park Hill flats have essentially been privatised and the residents been shoved further up the hill by Norfolk park ,making access to city centre shops more difficult and expensive. The middle class have taken over Park Hill and all that remains of the former community are a few plaintive poems at the edges.
@grayfreeman
@grayfreeman Жыл бұрын
"A joke shared between two shy people..." Intriguing. Will we have to wait for the autobiography?
@TroyTempest0
@TroyTempest0 Жыл бұрын
Again really enjoyed the vid Ollie. Very interesting and so educational - only ever passed through Sheffield...
@freddiebozwell7049
@freddiebozwell7049 8 ай бұрын
Brutalism, loved by the middle classes, hated by real working people.
@BigBlueRabbit
@BigBlueRabbit 12 күн бұрын
The people that have to live in them
@goombacraft
@goombacraft Жыл бұрын
Surprised no talk of Gleadless Valley. Some interesting architecture over there
@stevie-ray2020
@stevie-ray2020 Жыл бұрын
Here in Sydney, Aust., there's quite a few buildings you could classify as Brutalist, but I like them, with the Sirius Building & the Seymour (theatre) Centre among my favorites! The High School I attended was a mix of original Edwardian buildings with high windows & even higher ceilings, and late '60s Brutalism, with a more tempered mid '60s admin/library block thrown in!
@BeeHereNowuk
@BeeHereNowuk Жыл бұрын
Interesting! Thanks for the info
@stevedickson5853
@stevedickson5853 Жыл бұрын
Bet your weather isn't as Brutal as ours in Yorkshire in winter..
@stevie-ray2020
@stevie-ray2020 Жыл бұрын
@@stevedickson5853 No, but it can be in the hot summer months (as well as spring & autumn)! Forecast is for 35degC today! 🥵
@stevedickson5853
@stevedickson5853 Жыл бұрын
@@stevie-ray2020 crikey, that's hot 🔥
@TheLynneee
@TheLynneee Жыл бұрын
I'm Sheffield born and bred. Don't get me started on Sheffield. I left for more than 20 years and travelled the world. I was never going to come back until my dad died and I came back to look after mi' mum. It's the worst city in the country. The shopping centre is mad cos it is linear (Haymarket to Moorfoot) boring as hell. Miles of walking to get nowhere. Don't get me start on Meadowhell. Go about once a year for Christmas shopping. However, what Sheffield does have is wonderful countryside. My local park is 17 1/2 acres of woodland. My husband calls it middle earth.
@jmitchellbelderson
@jmitchellbelderson Жыл бұрын
I don't think it's a coincidence that so much goes on outside of the city centre - Crookes, Eccleshall Road, Abbeydale Road, Sharrow Vale, Kelham Island etc. Those areas are all fantastic and ahead of the overall suburbs in comparable cities (eg Leeds - where I grew up - and Manchester). But the city centre itself is being left to rot, sadly. Agree the greenery and Peak District are the real jewels in the crown. Sheffield has such potential, but definitely needs a lot of TLC, hard work and investment to get there.
@olaudio8493
@olaudio8493 Жыл бұрын
Agreed. Travel a little further out near or to the peaks and it’s beautiful. Eccleshall and Kelham Island are also great. Most of the park flats are student housing now and they are actually quite nice inside.
@keithscothern3398
@keithscothern3398 Жыл бұрын
yes the layout of Sheffield has always been problematic linear not a block system like most cities I always thought they should have run a free bus from one end to the other have big shops on the moor and small quirky shops at the other end that is walkable
@tumslucks9781
@tumslucks9781 Жыл бұрын
​In the 80s Sheffield had a free bus service that serviced the city centre.
@sheffsteel7
@sheffsteel7 Ай бұрын
@@keithscothern3398I was told a few decades back that it was difficult to plan a block system in the city centre because it’s so hilly. So you’re a slave to the terrain.
@hanalee2893
@hanalee2893 Жыл бұрын
in my final year at sheffield uni, gonna miss this weird ol' city
@StupidBlokeStupidVideos
@StupidBlokeStupidVideos Жыл бұрын
Worked at Park Hill flats a few times, the best thing about them is that from the roof, you can see pretty much all of Sheffield,… without seeing Park Hill flats. Unless you look off the wrong side, then you can see all the ones that are still derelict and haven’t been done up yet.
@Terry.W
@Terry.W Жыл бұрын
Spent many a happy day or two at the Crucible watching all the Snooker stars ..Alex Higgins ..Steve Davis ..Jimmy White ..Cliff Thorburn..
@CCMqueretaro
@CCMqueretaro Жыл бұрын
Love Sheffield, great people and great city. Sadly done dirty by god aweful local government and miopic at best strategy.
@sglenny001
@sglenny001 Жыл бұрын
It was once good
@modeltrainsandtracks
@modeltrainsandtracks 3 ай бұрын
Very good! The true purpose of hunanity and everything we do should serve it, including architecture. A great video, thank you.
@BeeHereNowuk
@BeeHereNowuk 2 ай бұрын
Yes, thank you
@isaacbutterworth3740
@isaacbutterworth3740 Жыл бұрын
Although brutalist and very concrete, there is a uniqueness to Sheffield and an undeniable charm it feels rather than a cramped fast paced city more like a town that refused to stop growing and developing
@stewartmackay
@stewartmackay Жыл бұрын
A lot of these towers and large blocks of flats all over the UK were built by the same company. In a nutshell, they built them as cheaply as possible. In the US & Canada, during the 60's and 70's, they built high rise apartment buildings which were actually good, well designed and good quality. In the UK, the towers the same heights were horrible places to live. I don't like it when they give protection to some of these concrete monstrosities. Park Hill and other places like it should be leveled.
@WhoOneIs
@WhoOneIs Жыл бұрын
The Park Hill Flats embody beautiful ideals in a brutal form (social democracy, solidarity, the public good). Neoliberal architecture might be appealing in a superficial way but have ugly ideals (destroying the commons, the naked pursuit of profit, the commodification of human needs, etc).
@richardburns5925
@richardburns5925 Жыл бұрын
The Park Hill flats should nationally embody and represent gentrification and social cleansing working hand in glove. They are also a prime example of this university technocrat run councils 15 minute city and city urbanisation plan. You mentioned democracy, I only see a technocracy.
@dkirk5814
@dkirk5814 Жыл бұрын
Very interesting and a masterclass in essay writing. Thanks
@harrygeorgebray6386
@harrygeorgebray6386 8 ай бұрын
I go to Sheffield Uni and once got stuck on the paternoster lift for 15 minutes. Someone must have pressed the emergency stop button because the lift just stopped with the floor level at my head height. Very fun but kinda scary
@mozdickson
@mozdickson Жыл бұрын
Having my morning coffee in NZ, and Twitter said "just look at this, look!" I guess Richard Hawley bought me here. Ok, ok, next visit I'll finally come to Sheffield.
@davebolan7282
@davebolan7282 7 ай бұрын
Lived on here 97-03. Hague Row.
@l.j.turner185
@l.j.turner185 Жыл бұрын
Honestly my favourite city ever ❤ Not because it’s perfect, far from it, but because it’s human 🇬🇧
@Jonathan_Doe_
@Jonathan_Doe_ Жыл бұрын
Ah Park Hill… Giving criminals a watchtower with a view so good that no raid would ever find anything.
@Kindred411uk
@Kindred411uk 9 ай бұрын
Great video, when did you film this?? I live in Sheffield and I’ve never seen less traffic and no people like on your footage.
@superowl91
@superowl91 Жыл бұрын
the A630 into Sheffield is like driving through the Somme.
@anniejones6598
@anniejones6598 Жыл бұрын
I’m really glad someone else appreciates Sheffield’s brutalism. Thought I’m super you didn’t visit the Gleadless estate, it looks like Pripyat sticking out of the trees on a hillside. I fell in love with this former council estate and actually left my home of London to buy an upside down house there, which I’m currently renovating into its late 50s modernist glory. The houses are by the same architect as Park Hill.
@robk181
@robk181 6 ай бұрын
Great presentation.
@ffrancrogowski2192
@ffrancrogowski2192 Жыл бұрын
There certainly are some buildings of strange architecture in the city, Ollie. It's quite a few years since I've been in the city, but I never realised how many unusual ones there are. I never thought that those apartments blocks behind the railway station would have been refurbished. Anyhow, this is an interesting production, and so, thank you.
@garybradbury1835
@garybradbury1835 8 ай бұрын
I love thee dear Sheffield ,what have they done too you? I see your streets are empty, i see your shops are too. I love thee dear Sheffield, what have they done too you? Your factorys are missing your steel is missing too. Your history? your future? You haven't got a clue I love thee dear Sheffield what have they done to you? Where are all your silversmiths and all your cuttlers too,your furnaces your accent what have they done to you? Your publicans ,your people, you've run em out a town,replaced em all with robots supplied by the crown. OH how i loved thee Sheffield, now a deserted foreign town.😢
@jacobmassey3897
@jacobmassey3897 Жыл бұрын
I had a girlfriend who lived in Sheffield for 2 years and i hated visiting the city because it's so gloomy and thats coming from someone who's from Stoke 😂
@michellew8118
@michellew8118 Жыл бұрын
Sheffield Council has a lot to answer for.
@wolfslair31
@wolfslair31 Жыл бұрын
Such as?
@HangingGarden606
@HangingGarden606 Жыл бұрын
I quite like brutalist architecture in certain settings. There is a college campus in Washington State that is nestled amongst a sprawling evergreen forest (Evergreen State University) that has a largely brutalist campus. Very striking to constrast amidst ethereal nature. Awful school, terrific architecture.
@charlesachurch7265
@charlesachurch7265 Жыл бұрын
Fascinating presentation thanks xxx
@jacquelinefilby1842
@jacquelinefilby1842 Жыл бұрын
Yes we had paternoster in the Chemistry block at Salford University. So quick convenient to use. Sad when they shut them down and then knocked the building down.
@tumslucks9781
@tumslucks9781 Жыл бұрын
Sheffield technology lol.
@yellowcatgirl
@yellowcatgirl Жыл бұрын
they just put up a Giant burger billboard wrapping around what was before a quite pleasant top of a building . absolute eyesore.
@officialpierluk
@officialpierluk 8 ай бұрын
Its the punk rock of the architecture world .. love the analogy !!
@johnjephcote7636
@johnjephcote7636 Жыл бұрын
I remember doing a field course in Sheffield c. 1970. They were about to clear the houses and cobbled streets of Attercliffe. My lecturers seemed delighted by Park Hill, though I do not think my fellow students shared their opinion. There were young 'kids' doing games and gymnastics right on the very top. Theye obviously knew a way that kead up there.
@runningforasthma_
@runningforasthma_ Жыл бұрын
Moore Street substation is amazing, a concrete castle!
@mikethepsych2084
@mikethepsych2084 Жыл бұрын
I think that footage is in The full Monty
@HarryHeyworth
@HarryHeyworth Жыл бұрын
it is
@Sam-mq9cj
@Sam-mq9cj Жыл бұрын
Like any architecture style, there is good and bad. I find brutalism to so polarising as when its good, its really good. And when its bad, its downright awful! Sheffield has some amazing brutalist churches dotted round the city that really push the boundaries of the local architecture, that stand out but fit in so well. Sheffield's brutalism was unfortunately combined with massive downturn in socio-economic standards and it suffered with it.
@cmg1819
@cmg1819 Жыл бұрын
I agree when it's done well it's among my favourite architecture styles. In Liverpool there's a similar glut of brutalist structures from the re build after the war, some I love some I hate.
@smfvmd
@smfvmd 5 ай бұрын
Why would a substation need windows? Hats off to Bryan Jefferson.
@OfSheffield
@OfSheffield Жыл бұрын
currently watching this from within the Moorfoot building, also known as the CowPat
@pigeon_the_brit565
@pigeon_the_brit565 Жыл бұрын
i find it fasinating how architecture that tried to be human became anything but. the buildings built by a misoginist and country carving empire are must more humanist than these, and a lot of them were torn down for them (though that church looks cool, but i don't think it deserves to be one)
@maccamcfcflc
@maccamcfcflc Жыл бұрын
My 1st job was on the Kelvin estate in 87 doing a heating refurb, I am from a rough part of Manchester and that estate was bonkers.
@stevedickson5853
@stevedickson5853 Жыл бұрын
I miss kelvin strangely not mentioned in the vid, if you were involved in the heating refurbishment, I was wondering if you went underneath the famous Ducts ..tunnels and pipes everywhere
@dorsettyke
@dorsettyke Жыл бұрын
​@@stevedickson5853 , not mentioned because they've been demolished for 25 years! 🙂
@stevedickson5853
@stevedickson5853 Жыл бұрын
@Dorset Tyke so has Hyde Park etc, its Park Hill that stands
@steelbladesproduction9867
@steelbladesproduction9867 Жыл бұрын
my hometown
@anvilbrunner.2013
@anvilbrunner.2013 Жыл бұрын
That was very good. I'm sorry that you only got one day of happy memories with the mystery person. I think you'd fit in here in Sheffield.
@BeeHereNowuk
@BeeHereNowuk Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much!
@anvilbrunner.2013
@anvilbrunner.2013 Жыл бұрын
@@BeeHereNowuk You're very welcome mi owd china.
@sergeykuzmichev8064
@sergeykuzmichev8064 Жыл бұрын
Thank you
@tremensdelirious
@tremensdelirious Жыл бұрын
Thank you.
@rabit818
@rabit818 Жыл бұрын
He said it, “it’s our delicate humanity”. Therefore brutalist is very indelicate.
@tomarmstrong1297
@tomarmstrong1297 Жыл бұрын
We have a medical research building here in Adelaide, South Australia that looks like a more extreme version of that cheese grater carpark. It's even known as the cheese grater. It greets you upon exit and entry of the Adelaide Central Railway station.
@daddylive9920
@daddylive9920 Жыл бұрын
I absolutely love brutalist architecture. I think it started working its charms on you towards the end there!
@BeeHereNowuk
@BeeHereNowuk Жыл бұрын
I think so too!
@robbaker1841
@robbaker1841 7 күн бұрын
Love the cheese grater, who’d ever guess it was a car park!?
@ZoeBateman
@ZoeBateman 3 күн бұрын
IT'S A CAR PARK?? I walked past it nearly every day when I was a student and always thought it must have been offices or something
@jetsons101
@jetsons101 Жыл бұрын
Ollie, just noticed, when did you change your thumbnail pic ???
@Rymunin
@Rymunin Жыл бұрын
university of essex's library also has a working paternoster :D its great fun, also a brutalist campus
@baby_joe
@baby_joe Жыл бұрын
What was the joke shared by the cheese grater? Was it that one about stevie wonder?
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