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Island House, Birmingham

Coordinates: 52°28′50″N 1°53′27″W / 52.4806°N 1.8907°W / 52.4806; -1.8907
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Island House
Map
General information
StatusDemolished
TypeOffice
LocationBirmingham, United Kingdom
Coordinates52°28′50″N 1°53′27″W / 52.4806°N 1.8907°W / 52.4806; -1.8907
Completed1912 (1912)
Demolished2012
Technical details
Floor count3
Design and construction
Architect(s)G. E. Pepper

Island House was a locally listed building in Birmingham's Eastside area, with a roughly triangular footprint, and was built in 1912.[1] by the architect G. E. Pepper,[2]

Located next to the Masshouse developments, Island House was[when?] occupied by teams from Birmingham City Council's arts team, including Film Birmingham, Urban Fusion and ArtsFest. The building was used in conjunction with other establishments in the city, including the Ikon Gallery.[3]

Although Island House's future was jeopardised by the City Park Gate development,[4] the building (along with local public house the Fox and Grapes) was included in these plans; with a refurbishment and an upwards extension designed by MAKE Architects for Quintain.

Shortly before demolition in February 2012

In early 2012 there was a campaign to save Island House, which Quintain had successfully applied for permission to demolish. Permission, in principle, was given by Birmingham City Council Planning Committee on 26 January 2012. At that time, however, it emerged that there was an outstanding Section 106 agreement for refurbishment. Quintain applied for permission to vary the Section 106 agreement, but later withdrew their application, claiming that since no building work had commenced they did not need to honour the Section 106 Agreement, which is only triggered when building work commenced. The validity of this claim was disputed.[citation needed] Campaigners pointed[citation needed] to Hotel la Tour, which is on part of the land covered by Quintain's original (2006) Planning Application[citation needed].

The building was subsequently demolished.

References

  1. ^ "City Park Gate, Birmingham City Park Gate, Birmingham, United Kingdom". designbuild-network. Retrieved 2008-06-28.
  2. ^ Foster, Andy (2007) [2005]. Birmingham. Pevsner Architectural Guides. Yale University Press. p. 190. ISBN 978-0-300-10731-9.
  3. ^ "Urban Fusion". Retrieved 2008-06-28.
  4. ^ "Eastside – City Park Gate". Birmingham City Council. Archived from the original on 2008-06-09. Retrieved 2008-06-28.