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Designs for St Paul's Church Harringay: New Church and Parsonage.

Architectural Drawing
20/06/1993
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Located in a residential area of Harringay, North London, St Paul’s was designed by Peter Jenkins between 1988 and 1993 to replace a Victorian Gothic Revival church (built 1890-1) which was destroyed by fire on Ash Wednesday 1984.

Jenkins’ church combines traditional liturgical forms with contemporary design. The plan of the church is traditional, being narrow and rectangular with the entrance at the west end and the altar at the east. This was in part dictated by the confines of the site, but also by the church’s Anglo-Catholic liturgical tradition which preferred an axial, processional plan. This traditional plan is in contrast to the majority of contemporary churches, which locate congregations around a central altar in order to emphasise the participatory aspect of the Communion.

In scale, Jenkins’ design echoes that of its Victorian predecessor, which was built to a vast scale, able to seat 900, and visually dominated the area’s skyline. Despite being a much smaller church in capacity, seating just 140, Jenkins has maintained the church’s visual dominance, making it an architectural and spiritual focal point in the surrounding area. This aspect of the design generated serious opposition from the local council, which argued – unsuccessfully – that the new church should blend in with the surrounding architecture.

Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleDesigns for St Paul's Church Harringay: New Church and Parsonage.
Materials and techniques
Pencil and blue pencil on tracing paper.
Brief description
Sketches of front elevation of St. Paul's Church, Harringay, with annotations, pencil on tracing paper, by Peter Jenkins, London, 1993.
Physical description
Techinical drawing of front elevation shown alongside smaller, rough thumbnail sketches.
Dimensions
  • Length: 420mm
  • Width: 300mm
Credit line
Given by Peter Jenkins
Place depicted
Summary
Located in a residential area of Harringay, North London, St Paul’s was designed by Peter Jenkins between 1988 and 1993 to replace a Victorian Gothic Revival church (built 1890-1) which was destroyed by fire on Ash Wednesday 1984.

Jenkins’ church combines traditional liturgical forms with contemporary design. The plan of the church is traditional, being narrow and rectangular with the entrance at the west end and the altar at the east. This was in part dictated by the confines of the site, but also by the church’s Anglo-Catholic liturgical tradition which preferred an axial, processional plan. This traditional plan is in contrast to the majority of contemporary churches, which locate congregations around a central altar in order to emphasise the participatory aspect of the Communion.

In scale, Jenkins’ design echoes that of its Victorian predecessor, which was built to a vast scale, able to seat 900, and visually dominated the area’s skyline. Despite being a much smaller church in capacity, seating just 140, Jenkins has maintained the church’s visual dominance, making it an architectural and spiritual focal point in the surrounding area. This aspect of the design generated serious opposition from the local council, which argued – unsuccessfully – that the new church should blend in with the surrounding architecture.
Bibliographic reference
Taken from notes by Peter Jenkins (Clare Lodge, Practice Archivist, 25/02/2016) Study following (30) exploring in an orthogonal 1:100 pencil drawing and combining free hand plans and perspective views, the emergence of the two towers of the west end disengaging as volumetric entities from the walls of the nave. A quadrastyle columnar arrangement is explored as the primary west facade. The square columns emerge as specially strengthened sections of the west facade wall forming a reciprocal arrangement with a colonnaded screen dividing the narthex from the nave. Mid right sketch plans show the three aisle plan solution tested, attempting to be organised with the emerging entry towers. Arithmetic note ‘5-seats’ and column of figures are dimensions across the nave in millimetres.
Other number
SPH(A)31 - Previous number
Collection
Accession number
E.119-2022

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Record createdJune 10, 2019
Record URL
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