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Television Centre
Airborae
Posts: 2,655
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You know, in amidst all the anniversary talk and the new series, the sad news is that BBC TV Centre in London has finally closed. The place that saw so many classic Doctor Who stories filmed there.
It's just a sad note for anniversary year, so I'd like to pay a tribute to all the crew, actors, behind the scenes, studio technicians etc who helped to make Doctor Who what it was. In the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s. Thanks guys. You did a splendid job.
It's just a sad note for anniversary year, so I'd like to pay a tribute to all the crew, actors, behind the scenes, studio technicians etc who helped to make Doctor Who what it was. In the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s. Thanks guys. You did a splendid job.
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To TVC
Actually it wasn't to be, as I ended up taking voluntary redundancy in 2009.
Were you sickened by the concept of 'the regions'?
(no, that's not a real question; I assume you were in a sufficiently comfortable position to take the redundancy offer and clear off early?)
Seeing what's happened since I left made me even gladder that I got out when I did!
But you could have been DIrector General! That is under the new rule, which appears to be similar to a backwards form of hot desking.
Commemorative programme is this FRIDAY on BBC Four. I'm not sure about the madness concert. Nothing scheduled though for on the 30th
it's current form on 31st March. After this, a program of redevelopment is due to start. Some bits of TV Centre are to be
demolished, mainly areas that have long since been abandoned. Some bits of TVC cannot be demolished, due to their
listed status. At least 3 of the studios will remain, and are due to be refurbished as part of the redevelopment plans.
The famous "concrete doughnut" is to be turned into a hotel and apartments, while the forecourt at the front of TVC is
to become a public plaza with bars and cafes. It had been feared by some that the entire TVC would be demolished,
like the former BBC Manchester studios on Oxford Road. Thankfully that isn't happening. Certain BBC subsidiaries
are actually moving back into TVC after the redevelopment project is complete.
While it's certainly the end of an era, BBC Television Centre isn't being consigned to the history books yet!
Full details are available at the official website, television-centre.com.
Sorry, you're right; it's on BBC4, preceded by the 1 hour Madness performance.
Thanks.
I'm Doug Stanhope, and that's why I drink.
It would have been madness to commit to spending a great deal of money in bringing the place up to the level expected from a broadcast centre in the digital age, especially one where many facilities (such as power and aircon) would have to be totally stripped out or integrated, or where the actual design & layout was not longer fit for purpose, and where the building itself was in a state of disrepair.
Haha. I like what you did there.
But the question I want to ask is, IF Michael Bentine was still with us, would the new BBC headquarters be iconic enough to unconvincingly destroy?
Thank you. I thought it important enough to make a thread.
Oh, there always has to be one, doesn't there? No soul or feeling, eyes just focussed on the balance sheet. That's the same argument they're using to move us from our beloved studios in Manchester, with all their rich history, to bloody Media City. "Media City" - the very name suggests something created on an iPad by executives or accountants - y'know, the people who've ruined our industry - and never mind the fact that everyone who works there loathes it.
BTW, I am not an accountant, just a realist who understands that it is likely to cost more to update TVC, cost more to try to make it fit for purpose, and is likely never to be as good as a purpose-built building.
Iconic history is great if it does the job
What are they going to do with the big clock at the Television Centre?
Many a time, many years ago I remember seeing that clock from the distance as I travelled on the tube into Shepherds Bush
I'm sorry to see TV Centre closed by the BBC of course, but I'm glad it will keep the name, will still have a few working TV Studios, and will hopefully be at least partially accessible to the public, which it isn't at the moment.
The fact that is wasn't even a listed building horrified me, and I'm glad that at least that was speedily corrected, which prevented the site being completely demolished and redeveloped.
It was built for a different age, was full of asbestos, which made maintenance and remodelling very difficult and expensive, and is far too large for the present BBC.
I'm afraid that the decision to move out was the only sensible one the BBC could make. It would have happened years earlier if the financial crash hadn't depressed property prices.
Thanks goodness that meant that "The Centre" was still there looking reasonably as it did 50 years ago for filming on An Adventure in Space and Time. That programme will now be almost as much a memorial to the great days of TVC as it will be to Doctor Who itself.
Such a shame they couldn't film the studio recording reconstruction where it actually happened, but that was at Lime Grove Studios, which sadly were demolished twenty years ago!