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Adam Nathaniel Furman unveilsCroydon Colonnade, a “porcelain palace for the people”

Gradients Galore

Adam Nathaniel Furman unveilsCroydon Colonnade, a “porcelain palace for the people”

In London,Croydon Colonnadelines the ground-level of a Croydon office building (Gareth Gardner)

Anglophilic architects may recognize the southLondonborough of Croydon for its arts-and-crafts style Town Hall by Charles Henman, completed in 1896, and its Brutalist residential towers by the Greater London Council in the 1960s. Drawing upon Croydon’s architectural heritage, and British Victorian design more broadly, multidisciplinary designerAdam Nathaniel Furmanhas added a newpublic artcenterpiece in the borough, what Furman calls a “porcelain palace for the people.”

Croydon Colonnadeis a thoughtfully designed public space at the ground-level of a Croydon office building. It consists of sixteen, 25-foot-tall columns and several walls clad in three-dimensional, handmade porcelain tiles.

Croydon Colonnadetakes inspiration from Brutalist architecture and Victorian design. (Gareth Gardner)

The porcelain tiles use a gradient to create a visual spectacle along the colonnade’s winding vista. At the head height of an average Londoner, the porcelain tiles change color from blue to white. Upon closer inspection, each tile possesses sensual, irregular details, revealing the artist’s unique hand.

福曼把inspiration for the loggia from Croydon’s Brutalist heritage and Durham Cathedral built in the 11th century with a Victorian restoration by George Gilbert Scott from 1860.Croydon Colonnade’s columns reference Durham Cathedral by using two types of stone patterns, one inboard the other outboard, to create a dazzling visual experience. Furman claimed the result is “uniquely British, distinctly Croydon and completely unique.”

Each of the porcelain tiles are hand made. (Gareth Gardner)

Furman’s project in Croydon is one of several completed by the designer this year in London. Previously,ANcovered Furman’s piece,Abundance, anart wall located at Paddington Station, which opened to the public this summer.

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