Kingston House, Kingston upon Hull explained

Kingston House
Architectural Style:Modernist
Address:Kingston House, Bond Street, HU1 3ER
Location City:Kingston upon Hull
Coordinates:53.7461°N -0.3392°W
Grid Name:OS grid reference
Start Date:1965
Stop Date:1967
Destruction Date:-->
Material:Concrete
Floor Count:12
Architect:Edwin Maxwell Fry
Architecture Firm:Fry, Drew and Partners
Unit Count:-->

Kingston House is a tower block and low rise office development built in Kingston upon Hull, England, in the 1960s in a modernist style.

History

Kingston House is a multi storey office development built 1965-7 to the design of Fry, Drew and Partners. The building was one of a number of high or medium rise concrete buildings built in the city in the post Second World War period including the main building of Hull College, 'Telephone House' (Carr Lane), and the Hull Royal Infirmary, as well as numerous high rise tower blocks.

Before the Hull Blitz bombing of 1941–5 the area contained buildings of a type common in the town area north of Queen's Dock, dating to before the 1850s. (The 'Georgian old town'.)[1] At the end of the war much of the street had been destroyed or was ruinous.[2] The facing Bond Street was widened in the late 1950s/early 1960s as part of an uncompleted redevelopment scheme. The building was originally intended to form part of an (unbuilt) wider redevelopment in the area, including a hotel, shopping centre on the other side of Bond Street.

The building consists of a low rise (3 storey) building with wings on either side (north and south) of a 12-storey tower block. The buildings were constructed using a concrete frame with infilled panels. The total site area is and the total floor area . Floor area per deck on the upper tower block (floors 5–12) was .

The modernist design fell out of favour during the latter half of the 20th century, and by the 21st century the building was often referred to as an 'eyesore'. In the Hull Pevsner architectural guide it is described as "uninspired".

Office tenants included Humberside County Council (up to 1980), later Humberside Police, and after 1996 Hull City Council.

In 2014 the council offered the building for sale after relocating staff based there as part of cost-cutting exercises; demolition and wider redevelopment were seen at the time as potential options for the site, alternative plans (2015, withdrawn) included redevelopment of the buildings as apartments.

As of 2014 the buildings were also used for various telecommunications equipment including aerial leases to Vodafone, Arqiva, Orange PCS, Cable & Wireless, and EE/Hutchison 3G.

In mid 2017 Trade-park Ltd. acquired the property from Hull City Council. In September 2017 the company announced plans to convert the building into a combination development named "K2", consisting of a 100-bed hotel, 14 apartments, and office space.The first tenants moved into the complex in February 2018.[3]

References

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Ordnance Survey 1:2500 1925; 1:1056 1856
  2. Ordnance Survey 1:2500 1948–9
  3. News: Inside the cool new K2 complex replacing run-down Kingston House. Saker-Clark. Henry. 17 February 2018. Hull Daily Mail. 19 August 2018.