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Showing posts with label bloomberg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bloomberg. Show all posts

Thursday, 9 November 2017

Bloomberg London and St Francis at The Engine Room

Today I've visited two new buildings, both of which make art prominent features of their design. 

Image result for bloomberg london art

Located in the heart of the City of London, Bloomberg's new European headquarters is the first wholly owned and designed Bloomberg building in the world. Designed to facilitate collaboration and fuel innovation, it will bring Bloomberg’s 4,000 London-based employees under one roof for the first time.

The 3.2 acre Bloomberg site encompasses three public plazas, providing new civic space in the heart of the City. Bloomberg Arcade divides the site and returns a lost portion of Watling Street – an important Roman road – back to the city grid. The covered dining arcade features a variety of independent restaurants and serves as a new pedestrian thoroughfare. At each end, it is defined by a major new public artwork by Cristina Iglesias that creates a place of repose among the City’s dense fabric of streets. Art plays a central role in the project, with eight major contemporary commissions in and around the building. Monumental works by Olafur Eliasson, Pae White, and leading British artists also feature in a building designed by Norman Foster.

Designed to complement historic neighbouring structures and to age gracefully with time, the Bloomberg building is the biggest stone project in the City of London for a century. It features 9,600 tonnes of Derbyshire sandstone and blends locally sourced, natural materials with the best of international craftsmanship.

Bloomberg’s new European headquarters is located on one of the UK’s most significant archaeological sites, home to the ancient Temple of Mithras and at the heart of what was Roman London’s commercial centre. London Mithraeum Bloomberg SPACE restores the Temple of Mithras to the site of its discovery. Open to the public and free to enter, Bloomberg SPACE will host a series of contemporary art commissions reflecting broadly on the history of the site, as well as a huge vitrine displaying more than 600 remarkable Roman artefacts found during recent excavations at Bloomberg. The immersive temple reconstruction uses carefully directed lights, haze and sound to bring the temple’s remains to life, and to evoke the rituals and activities that took place within its cave-like walls.



St Francis at the Engine Room is a community centre and the first new Anglican Church to be erected in London in almost 40 years. Spearheaded by the Diocese of London working in partnership with Lee Valley Estates, Newlon Housing Trust and London City Mission. It has been created to put a community resource and place of worship at the heart of the new housing development in the Hale Village. 

The opening of the Engine Room community centre in 2013 was a key step towards creating a dynamic community space for adults, children and families in Hale Village. The vision is to become a catalyst for building community at the heart of the Hale Village by putting a community centre and church at the heart of this new housing development. Everything done through their workers, volunteers and partnerships with other community groups is about investing in local lives. They want to give every resident of the Hale Village daily opportunities to make new friends, to learn from each other, to grow spiritually and to share their lives. Their community workers, Andrew and Martina Kwapong and local volunteers are using their knowledge and expertise to draw people in, make them feel they belong and unlock their potential for giving back to others. In September 2014, they were joined by The Revd. Andrew Williams, an experienced parish priest who is leading St Francis church. Last year, hundreds of local residents benefited from a wide range of fun and creative activities run by the Engine Room and St Francis church.

Graeme Mortimer Evelyn has created a permanent contemporary altarpiece (Reredos) The Eternal Engine for St Francis at The Engine Room. This hand carved, painted relief sculpture is approximately 5 metres x 3 metres in scale and is be one of the largest permanent contemporary sculpture works ever installed within a sacred space in the UK. It also represents the second Church of England altarpiece commission the artist has received, following the unveiling in 2011 of the Reconciliation Reredos for the historic St Stephens Church in Bristol. Evelyn's Stations of the Cross can also be seen currently in St Francis at The Engine Room. These began as a journey of bridge building between an understanding of his Buddhist faith and Christian upbringing, leading to a universal message of human struggle and hope.

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Beyonce - At Last.

Thursday, 7 September 2017

The House of Sound


House of Sound

16-17 September 2017 | FREE
Saturday 12noon-5pm
Sunday 11am-4pm

Guildhall Yard
London, EC2V 5AE

Travel back in time to experience London as heard by Chaucer, Dickens and Shakespeare in a ground-breaking work that puts back the sounds the City has lost.

As part of Open House weekend, time-travel from medieval to present day London through an immersive sound experience that captures the changing sounds of the City. Composed by Iain Chambers, live performances from 7 musicians played through 22 loudspeakers will tell the story of the Square Mile, revealing the impact of its changing built and social environment.

Performances take place on the hour on Saturday 16 Setepmber from 12noon - 5pm and 11am - 4pm on Sunday 17 September.

Sonic Trail

11-17 September 2017 | FREE

Part of the House of Sound, the Sonic Trail will see ‘Mythophones’ – sculptural speakers – placed around Cheapside for listeners to connect to the locations and their previous incarnations.

One of the Mythophones will be located at St Stephen Walbrook. The river Walbrook played an important role in the Roman settlement of Londinium. Starting in what is now Finsbury, it flowed through the centre of the walled city, bringing a supply of fresh water whilst carrying waste away to the Thames, and dividing Roman London into its eastern and western halves. When St Margaret Lothbury was rebuilt in 1440, the Lord Mayor paid for the lower Walbrook to be covered over. John Stow, the historian of London, wrote in 1598 that the watercourse, having several bridges, was afterwards vaulted over with brick and paved level with the streets and lanes where it passed, and that houses had been built so that the stream was hidden as it is now.

A temple of Mithras dating to the third century AD lay a short distance from St Stephen Walbrook. The remains were found in 1954 during the construction of the Bucklersbury House office block and will be displayed within the new Bloomberg London building.

Prior to the construction of the Mansion House in 1739, the Stocks market lay on the same site, dating to 1282, taking its name from a set of stocks used for punishment. A 1322 decree stipulated that the Stocks market was one of five places where fish and meat were allowed to be sold in London. After Stow's time its character changed, and towards its end was used mostly for selling herbs.

Running time: 4’16"

Running order:
  • The Walbrook
  • Street vendors’ cries and conversations at the Stocks market
  • Tavern conversations
  • Merchant dictating a letter
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Thirty Seconds to Mars ft. Travis Scott - Walk On Water.

Saturday, 2 September 2017

St Stephen Walbrook: Autumn Newsletter


St Stephen Walbrook has just published its Autumn Newsletter. We have a very varied and exciting programme for the Autumn including a new initiative - plus+ presentations – which will explore the place of faith in the world of business, as a way of further developing the relationships St Stephen Walbrook has with the business community in the City of London.

The inaugural presentation in our new series of plus+ presentations will be given by Douglas Board, founder of Maslow’s Attic, on 21 September at 6.30pm. Douglas will share practical, intellectual and spiritual reflections on flourishing at work in a presentation entitled ‘In an open plan office, can anyone hear you scream?’
His presentation will follow a new monthly Evening Prayer service at 6.15pm and will then be followed by a drinks reception and networking. Please do come along to support this new initiative and tell friends and colleagues, particularly any who work in the City.
Our newsletter also provides information about:
This Autumn we also welcome to the area our new neighbours at Bloomberg London. Their site includes Bloomberg Arcade comprising 10 independent restaurants offering a variety of cuisines and dining styles, seven days a week, and also the London Mithraeum Bloomberg SPACE. This anticipated cultural hub will restore the ancient Temple of Mithras to the site of its discovery, showcase a selection of the remarkable Roman artefacts discovered during excavation, and display a series of contemporary art commissions responding to the site’s history.

Our new series of Discover & explore services will focus on ‘Rome, London & Christianity’, as part of the City of London's 'Londinium' programme. Other history themed musical happenings at St Stephen include: The House of Sound (11-17 September), which recreates the sounds of the past activities of Walbrook and Watling Street, and Preludes & Vollenteries 1 (14 September, 6pm) exploring the dialogue between the great architecture of Wren, Hawksmoor and Hooke, and the work of the violin makers and composers whose instruments and music flooded in the London in the years after the Restoration.
We very much hope you will find things of interest and spiritual refreshment in our Autumn programme and look forward to seeing you whenever you are able to join us over this period. Please do pass on our newsletter and share information about services and events, so that others can also connect with these varied and exciting services and events.

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Peter Sheppard Skærved - B Minor Fantasie.

Friday, 8 May 2015

The convergence of historic Anglican worship with online connectedness





At St Stephen Walbrook this week we have had the second session of our Start:Stop reflections, hosted students from Trinity Western University, toured the Bloomberg development opposite the church, considered being doers of the word in our midweek Eucharist, hosted a meeting of the London Internet Church trustees and held recitals by Mainly Two and Mark Williams.

I was particularly interested to meet Dr. David Squires, Dean of the School of the Arts, Media + Culture at Trinity Western University, a Christian liberal arts university on the west coast of Canada, who brought a group of university students to St Stephen Walbrook this week as part of their courses in the arts and worship. One of his concerns in the course is to investigate the vital issues of worship in our postmodern culture including the convergence of historic Anglican worship with online connectedness. As a result, the relationship between the London Internet Church and St Stephen Walbrook was of particular interest.

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Mainly Two - Violin Duet No. 1.