There is no doubting the damage done to the city by the idealistic urban vision of the 1960s, but again this vision was not realised. Affected with the fall of Labour and the Conservative cutbacks in government spending, some of the buildings of this plan have become some of the city’s scars despite being completed in the 1970s. For example, the removal of the motorway through the city centre and the demolition of the Royal Arcade and the construction of Swan House have left the city fractured and inaccessible. Yet what remains of Newcastle’s skywalk system today carries on this idealistic urban planning idea: a city where the ground is dominated by the car and the skywalk system allows pedestrians to move around. The product of this ideal, however, is the fragmented neighbourhoods of Newcastle today, with an unfinished footpath system that makes these buildings inaccessible.
The twelve modernist skyscrapers originally envisaged for the Quayside area were also not completed, which is why Newcastle’s ancient buildings have been preserved.
Morton, D. (2024). How historic Newcastle Quayside might have been torn down in the late 1960s. [online] Chronicle Live. Available at: https://www.chroniclelive.co.uk/news/history/how-historic-newcastle-quayside-might-29126401.
There is no doubting the damage done to the city by the idealistic urban vision of the 1960s, but again this vision was not realised. Affected with the fall of Labour and the Conservative cutbacks in government spending, some of the buildings of this plan have become some of the city’s scars despite being completed in the 1970s. For example, the removal of the motorway through the city centre and the demolition of the Royal Arcade and the construction of Swan House have left the city fractured and inaccessible. Yet what remains of Newcastle’s skywalk system today carries on this idealistic urban planning idea: a city where the ground is dominated by the car and the skywalk system allows pedestrians to move around. The product of this ideal, however, is the fragmented neighbourhoods of Newcastle today, with an unfinished footpath system that makes these buildings inaccessible.
The twelve modernist skyscrapers originally envisaged for the Quayside area were also not completed, which is why Newcastle’s ancient buildings have been preserved.
Morton, D. (2024). How historic Newcastle Quayside might have been torn down in the late 1960s. [online] Chronicle Live. Available at: https://www.chroniclelive.co.uk/news/history/how-historic-newcastle-quayside-might-29126401.