Pioneer Centre IX
St Mary's Road, London SE15
“Described by Walter Gropius as ‘an oasis of glass in desert of brick'”
This two-bedroom split-level apartment lies within Sir Owen William’s Grade II-listed Pioneer Centre on St Mary’s Road in Peckham. Built in 1935, the art deco building is characterised by expansive banks of windows that fill the rooms with light. Originally designed to house a health centre, residents have access to unrivalled facilities, including a striking 1930s swimming pool, tennis courts, gym and gated grounds. This apartment also has its own private rear terrace - an exceedingly peaceful reading spot amid climbing plants and leafy trees.
History
The Pioneer Centre was purpose-built for what became known as ‘The Peckham Experiment’. Two doctors, George Scott Williamson and Innes Hope Pearse chose Peckham because the “populace roughly represents a cross-section of the total populace of the nation with as widely differing a cultural admixture as it is possible to find in any circumscribed metropolitan area”. The doctors believed that medical practice was overly focused on curing disease, rather than on cultivating good health and preventing illness. Instead, they believed that given the right tools, people would take responsibility for their own well-being.
The experiment began in 1926, using a house on Queen’s Road SE15 as its base. For the new Pioneer Centre, Sir Owen Williams devised large open spaces to allow the Centre’s doctors to properly observe the members. Williams was formally trained as an engineer and is best known for his design of the Express Building in Manchester, along with forward-thinking designs for Britain’s motorways including ‘Spaghetti Junction’. Using concrete and steel allowed the architect to realise ambitious shapes that housed a gymnasium, lecture hall and rest and recreation rooms. At the centre of the building is the swimming pool, whose glazed roof allows in as much natural light as possible, along with windows that could be fully opened to circulate fresh air into the building. Cork floors encouraged people to walk barefoot.
Members paid one shilling a week to access organised activities, games and workshops as well as yearly medical examinations to keep track of progress. Central to the Pioneer Centre’s philosophy was the belief that left to themselves people would begin to organise in a creative way, which indeed happened. The centre closed in 1950 despite public support, as its innovative approach did not fit with the tenets of the newly formed NHS. However, its ideals inspired further projects in the field of social biology.
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