Royal Victoria Dock

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Looking west towards Canary Wharf
Looking west towards Canary Wharf

Coordinates: 51°30′21″N 0°01′47″E / 51.505823, 0.029714 The Royal Victoria Dock is the largest of three docks in the Royal Docks of east London, now part of the redeveloped Docklands.

Contents

[edit] History

Looking west from Connaught Road swing bridge in 1973
Looking west from Connaught Road swing bridge in 1973

Opened in 1855 on a previously uninhabited area of the Plaistow Marshes, it was the first of the Royal Docks and the first London dock to be designed specifically to accommodate large steam ships. It was also the first to use hydraulic power to operate its machinery and the first to be connected to the national railway network via what is now the North London Line. It consisted of a main dock and a basin to the west, providing an entrance to the Thames on the western side of the complex. The dock was deeply indented with four solid piers, each 152 m long by 43 m wide, on which were constructed two-storey warehouses. Other warehouses, granaries, shed and storage buildings surrounded the dock, which had a total of 3.6 km of quays.

The dock was an immediate commercial success, as it could easily accommodate all but the very largest steamships. By 1860, it was already taking over 850,000 tons of shipping a year - double that of the London Docks, four times that of St Katharine Docks and 70% more than the West India Dock and East India Docks combined. It was badly damaged by German bombing in World War II but experienced a resurgence in trade following the war. However, from the 1960s onwards, the Royal Victoria experienced a steady decline - as did all of London's other docks - as the shipping industry adopted containerization, which effectively moved traffic downstream to Tilbury. It finally closed to commercial traffic along with the other Royal Docks in 1980.

[edit] Destination Docklands

Main article: Destination Docklands
The dock during Jean Michel Jarre's Destination Docklands concert. A green projection can be seen on the facade of Spiller Mill
The dock during Jean Michel Jarre's Destination Docklands concert. A green projection can be seen on the facade of Spiller Mill

In a rather unusual twist, in 1988, the then-dilapidated site was chosen by French electronic musician Jean Michel Jarre as the site for a concert, eventually titled Destination Docklands. It also inspired him to write the album Revolutions. Originally planned as a one off event, it was scheduled for 24 September 1988, but Jarre and his crew had to battle constantly with Newham Council and London fire Brigade over logistical and safety concerns. Although the crew publicly sought other venues in the meantime, a compromise was reached in which the event was split into two concerts in order to splite the crowds over two nights. These concerts went ahead on October 8th and 9th 1988. Weather throughout the build up to the event was extremely rainy, and while the downpours narrowly avoided the first concert, much of the second took place in heavy rain.

The crew had the waterfront faces of two warehouses painted white to be used as giant projection screens. Of these, Spiller Mill still stands, and retains its white colour from the event. The floating stage was specially-built, and made up of several Barges shipped in from the north of England welded together to create what Jarre termed his "battleship".The show attracted a live audience of an estimated figure of 200,000 not including People outside of the concert venue in surrounding Parks listening to the concert live on BBC Radio 1.

The concert programme featured drawings of the redevelopment works due to take place in the years after the concerts.

[edit] The Dock today

The Millennium Dome and Canary Wharf from the Royal Victoria Dock
The Millennium Dome and Canary Wharf from the Royal Victoria Dock

The Royal Victoria Dock has experienced major redevelopment under the London Docklands Development Corporation. The dock itself still exists and is accessible to ships, although its western entrance has been filled in and it is now used chiefly for watersports. Its transport links have been greatly improved with new roads and Docklands Light Railway lines running along both its north and south side.

Most of the original warehouses have been demolished but the historic 19th century K-S and W Warehouses - both listed buildings - have survived.

The dock is dominated by the ExCeL Exhibition Centre, constructed on the north quayside and opened in November 2000, and by the adjacent high level Royal Victoria Dock Bridge. The waterside location of ExCel is used to its advantage when it hosts the annual London Boat Show, with visiting vessels moored alongside the exhibition centre.

On the south side of the Dock is Britannia Village. The award winning development, which included the high level footbridge, was commissioned by LDDC and carried out by Wimpey Homes, the Peabody Trust and the East Thames Housing Group between 1994 and 2000. Phase II of the project was left to the LDDC’s successors. This was a development around the Pontoon Dock to include a village centre with mixed development of business, retail and leisure facilities and up to 700 new homes. Now the responsibility of the London Development Agency, this development is now known as Silvertown Quays and includes proposals to refurbish the remaining mills along the waterfront for new uses and an aquarium. Britannia Village has its own Community Foundation.[1]

[edit] Photos

[edit] References

  1. ^ West Silvertown Online

[edit] See also