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2 Eylül 2016 Cuma

Francis Crick Institute: cathedral of science "looks better from 1,000 ft"

Appearing on London’s King’s Cross horizon like an upturned beetle, with its row of metal chimneys protruding like little pairs of legs from the fattened silver belly of its roof, the Francis Crick Institute cuts a strange silhouette. As its dichroic-coated glass fins shimmer with rainbow iridescence in the late summer sun, it could be one of the specimens under the electron microscope buried in the bowels of this new £700m biomedical research facility.


“It looks better from 1,000 ft,” says Sir Paul Nurse, the jovial Nobel prize-winning director of the country’s new flagship research centre, the largest such hub in Europe, now charged with furthering our understanding of the fundamental biology of human health. “You can’t really see it properly from the ground.”


Some passersby might wish that were true. Walking the streets of Somers Town, one of the most deprived wards in the UK, it’s hard to miss the 1,000,000 sq ft pile, signalled from all directions by the great aluminium slug that slithers across its rooftop and the orange tiled walls that loom above the streets.


Almost 10 years in the making, the Crick is an ocean-liner of medical research that will soon hold 1,500 scientists tackling the roots of everything from cancer and HIV to tuberculosis and neurodegenerative diseases.



Better from the sky? Francis Crick Institute.


Better from the sky? Francis Crick Institute. Photograph: Wellcome Images

It is the product of a landmark partnership between the UK’s three largest funders of biomedical research (the Medical Research Council, Cancer Research UK and the Wellcome Trust) and three of its leading universities (University College London, Imperial College London and King’s College London), bringing different disciplines together under one big, bulbous roof. With three Nobel prize winners on its staff, expectations for groundbreaking discoveries are high; but does the architecture live up to the cutting-edge science?


Filling a four-acre site directly behind Colin St John Wilson’s British Library and George Gilbert Scott’s St Pancras hotel, the building joins a huddle of brick behemoths, and is evidently trying its best to fit in. Clad in terracotta tiles, it echoes the warm orange hues of its neighbours, while the curving aluminium roof is a nod to the station’s barrel-vaulted Victorian train shed. Yet it misses the mark on both counts, lacking either the confidence or elegance of its forebears.


In an attempt to break up the building’s bulk, the architects have employed a multitude of different claddings, using fins and grids and faceted walls of glazing, but the pick’n’mix collage only calls attention to the building’s heft. The roof – designed to hide the three-storey technical plant needed to keep the labs chugging along – looks like the swooping canopy of an airport terminal, cut and pasted on to a cluster of generic office blocks.



The new building was nominated for this year’s Carbuncle Cup.


The Crick was nominated for this year’s Carbuncle Cup award for Britain’s worst building. Photograph: Daniel Leal-Olivas/AFP/Getty Images

The resulting dog’s dinner was perhaps inevitable, given the project’s convoluted gestation. The original design competition was won by HOK, a vast firm with US headquarters, who concocted a faceted-glass object similar style in to lumpen Siemens Crystal in London’s Royal Docks. Their proposals were met with fierce opposition from Camden’s planners, who had earmarked the site for affordable housing (a plan that was overturned by central government pressure). Camden had a more sober scheme in mind, preferring a costume of masonry to glass – something more akin to the exemplary, if rather beige, King’s Cross Central development nearby.


Keen to ease the project through the system, the client brought on PLP – architects of the monstrous 22 Bishopsgate Tower proposal – to dress the great hulk in planner-friendly clothing. The outcome is neither fish nor fowl, neither faceted crystal nor background filler, but something that tries to be both at once: a portly scientist stuffed into an ill-fitting suit and crowned with a shouty hat. It’s no surprise that it was recently nominated for the Carbuncle Cup, the annual award for the country’s worst building.


For all its exterior clumsiness, complete with a ground floor that reveals little of what’s going on inside, the building seems to be more successfully configured within. As you enter the complex, it quickly becomes clear why some science wags have nicknamed it Sir Paul’s Cathedral, after Nurse. A soaring nave-like atrium extends the full 200-metre length of the building, rising 50 metres past the three main levels of laboratories, crossed halfway by transepts and bridges, and opening up views between the teams of researchers busying away at their benches.



The Crick is Europe’s biggest biomedical research institute.


The Crick is Europe’s biggest biomedical research institute. Photograph: Daniel Leal-Olivas/AFP/Getty Images

“Discovery without boundaries is our tagline,” says Nurse, “so we didn’t want any physical barriers between our 120 labs. It’s all about open-plan, collaborative working and direct sightlines, in an environment that I hope will encourage a sort of gentle anarchy.”




In other hands, this building could have had the thrill of the Pompidou Centre in Paris




Scientists who have moved here from the usual siloed university departments appear delighted at their newfound world of transparency and chance encounters. “I hardly ever met my research partner before,” says Nick Luscombe, whose work focuses on the computational crunching of genomic data. “But now I wave to him every morning across the bridge and we can instantly share our test results.” Further moments of gentle anarchy are encouraged with lots of break-out spaces and an open staircase (not a double helix, alas), although the designers could have tried harder to make these areas more inviting.


While the labs are well configured, the clunky hand of the HOK-PLP partnership is never far away. A big white blob squats at the bottom of the atrium like an invasive tumour, housing the 450-seat auditorium, while the public “gallery” area feels like an afterthought, occupying a corner of leftover space on the ground floor. The cacophony of materials continues, with chequerboards of wooden veneer in three different shades, whiteboard surfaces for passing boffins to jot down their brainwaves and acoustic panels bolted on to every soffit.


Things are more successful in the working guts of the building. On the uppermost floor, the huge ventilation ducts finally break out from their plasterboard hiding places and shoot up through the roof, with the majesty of a ship’s engine room. It’s a moment that makes you realise that, in other hands, this building could have had the thrill of the Pompidou Centre, in Paris. It could have celebrated the astonishing fact that this 12-storey building (a third of which is underground) weighs the same as a 25-storey tower block and expels enough air to fill an Olympic swimming pool every 10 seconds.


The building will no doubt serve the Crick’s founding purposes just fine, but it could have been so much more. Compare it with the Stirling prize-winning Sainsbury Laboratory in Cambridge and the difference is striking: the clunks cannot be excused as the inevitabilities of a working science lab.


“Sometimes in Britain we do amazing things, almost by accident,” says Nurse, referring to the miraculous foundation of the Crick. Except in this case, the accidental fumbling of the design process didn’t quite work out as hoped.



Francis Crick Institute: cathedral of science "looks better from 1,000 ft"

30 Mayıs 2014 Cuma

Funeral of Stephen Sutton requires place at Lichfield Cathedral

The 19-yr-outdated succumbed to several tumours on May 14 soon after a determined battle – provoking an outpouring of grief, and prompting Prime Minister David Cameron to say: “His spirit, bravery and fund-raising for cancer study were all an inspiration.”


1000′s turned out above each days to file past Stephen’s white coffin as it lay in a place of honour inside the cathedral in what Dean of Lichfield the Extremely Reverend Adrian Dorber named a “phenomenal” display of human unity, for the guy he mentioned “has grow to be everybody’s favourite son”.



Funeral of Stephen Sutton requires place at Lichfield Cathedral

Stephen Sutton vigil: hundreds give "Thumbs Up" as cathedral bells chime

Sarah Deeley, a care worker from Tamworth in the West Midlands, said she needed to come and say “thank you” to Stephen for his example.


“He was just such a wonderful person, this is the least I could do,” she said.


It comes as record producers announced a charity record is to be released in Stephen’s memory.


The record, called Hope Ain’t A Bad Thing, has been produced by the Neon Brotherhood, as a personal tribute by 40 musicians inspired by the work of the 19-year-old.


It will feature a speech from Stephen that he had intended to use on his own charity single, while he is also heard playing the tambourine.


The record featuring Stephen has been cut at the Neon Sound Studios in his home town of Burntwood in Staffordshire, where he jammed as a drummer with band Nothing Personal.


Mike Wood, who coordinated the single, posted an advert on Facebook back in April when Stephen first brought the cause of the TCT to the fore. The response to his appeal was “overwhelming”, the 29-year-old said.


“We had so many people that in the end I had to turn musicians away,” said Mike, who plays bass on the 5 minute 25 second recording.


Shane Mason, 19, of Brownhills in the West Midlands, plays piano on the record.


“I was never fortunate enough to meet Stephen, but he was an inspiration,” he said.


“We’ve had the blessing from the family, and both Chris (Stephen’s older brother) and Jane (his mother) came to see us in the studio last week, and are behind us 100%.”


He added: “I was playing piano on the track, and there was a picture of Stephen hanging up on the studio wall above me, where he’s smiling and posing.


“I sort of liked to think he was there with us while we were recording.”


All the proceeds from the sale of the record, which will be released on iTunes and Amazon on Monday, will go to the TCT.


A photo of Stephen Sutton stands in Lichfield Cathedral (PA)


Well-wishers have streamed into the 14th-century cathedral, with many unable to enter the packed building, as an organist played Toccata from Symphony V by French composer Charles Marie Widor.


Before the vigil at began at 7pm on Thursday £20,000 was donated to his JustGiving page in an hour.


Donations were being made at a rate of more than £1,000 an hour to his campaign, which rose from £4.23 million at 7.30pm to £4.24 million by 8pm.


Stephen first started raising money for TCT after he was told his cancer was terminal, prompting him to create a bucket list of 46 “weird and wonderful things” he wanted to do before he died.


Another item on Stephen’s bucket list was a lad’s holiday in Ibiza (FILM UNITED)


His initial target was a modest £10,000 but he increased this to £1 million after donations soared and his appeal attracted the attention of celebrities. He reached his £1 million target after posting a ‘final thumbs up’ selfie when his condition worsened and he went into hospital shortly before his death on May 14.


Opening the ceremony, the Dean of Lichfield, the Very Reverend Adrian Dorber, described Stephen as an “extraordinary example and inspiration” for everyone.


He said: “We have gathered because we don’t want to forget how Stephen has touched so many lives, how his positive attitude turned his own cancer into a force for life.


“We need to remember what Stephen has taught us; not to waste time on his illness, but to grab hold of every single thing that enhances life and makes the world a more joyful place.


“In these next few hours we are trying to do what Stephen did brilliantly, and that is to make the unacceptable meaningful and beautiful.”


He then read the poem “Dust” by Elizabeth Jennings before Julia Hayburn, the assistant head of Stephen’s former school, Chase Terrace Technology College, also paid tribute.


She told of how, when he was diagnosed, the “determined” teenager’s immediate reaction was to call a meeting with teachers because he refused to take doctors’ advice to “forget his Year 11 study”.


Instead he would go on to complete his GCSEs and AS-levels, she added.


“Words like awesome, awe-inspiring and inspirational became synonymous with Stephen – but they only touched the surface of what he has become on a national and international scale,” said Mrs Hayburn.


Following the end of the hour long formal part of the service, the Dean invited the congregation to do five things in turn, including signing the books of condolence and giving the “thumbs-up” sign that has become synonymous with the teenager’s campaign.


Scattered around the church were pictures of Stephen, badges printed with the words “thumbs up for Stephen” and cards telling people where to donate.


Stephen Sutton achieved many of his bucket-list wishes and raised millions for cancer research before his death (PA)


Also on the cards were Stephen’s most famous quote: “I don’t see the point in measuring the worthiness of your life in terms of time, but rather you should measure life in terms of what you achieve.”


Among those attending and giving their thumbs-up were Celia Houghton and her 14-year-old daughter Freya, who had gone to school with Stephen.


The teenager remembered a powerful speech Stephen gave to the school’s assembly a year ago, saying “he was one person who stood out”.


“The one thing that spoke to me was when he said ‘don’t measure time by the clock, measure it by what you do’,” added Freya.


“When he died, people cried at school.


“I remember walking along the corridor and people were using Post-It notes to stick goodbye messages on the wall.”


The teenager’s favourite records – including You’ve Got A Friend In Me, by Randy Newman – were played.


Other songs on the 38 minute compilation including Time To Say Goodbye, by Russell Watson; The Circle Of Life from Disney’s The Lion King; Track Five, by Foo Fighters; Do You Realize, by The Flaming Lips; One Day Like This, by Elbow; I’ll Be Missing You, by Puff Daddy and Faith Evans; You’ll Never Walk Alone and I’ve Had The Time Of My Life, by Bill Medley and Jennifer Warnes.


A queue of people waiting to pay their respects to the teenager stretched outside Lichfield cathedral and lasted for more than an hour after the Dean concluded his address.


Pamela Milligan, whose daughter attended the same school as Stephen said: “I just think it’s fantastic what he has achieved. The town has come together to pay its respect, it’s covered in yellow. He was an inspiration.”


Peter Robinson, 70, a chartered surveyor said: “He has done a wonderful thing, raising an amazing amount of money, and we wanted to show our respect for what he has achieved.


“We can’t believe how the boy next door can raise £4 million. It’s so moving. The ceremony was very appropriate and absolutely packed out.”


People laid bunches of yellow flowers outside the Cathedral.


One bouquet left by one of the 19-year-old’s former band members held a tribute that said: “Ste, it was a pleasure to share the stage with you. Keep on drumming buddy.”


Another bunch was left by a woman who met Stephen as he worked to reach his first fundraising goal of £10,000 in 2013 and became friends with him in the last year of his life.


Charlotte Aspley, 24, who also raises money for TCT said: “I’m just very sad. He was the most amazing person, the most jolly person I have ever met. When I first met him he was going for his first target of £10,000 and now it’s £4 million.


“He was incredible. He became more and more determined to raise more and more money with every milestone he reached.


“This service would have meant everything to him. He always wanted to get himself out there, to meet people. We are so proud of him, and now we want to keep his work going.”


The teenager documented his battle with cancer on his Facebook page, Stephen’s Story.


The funeral cortege of Stephen Sutton arrives at Lichfield Cathedral (GETTY IMAGES)


More than £25,000 was donated overnight on Wednesday to reach £4 million by Thursday afternoon for Teenage Cancer Trust (TCT).


Simon Fuller, director of services at TCT said: “Stephen’s approach to cancer, indeed his approach to life has inspired and motivated more people than we could ever count.


“There is never a good time to get cancer but for a teenager the timing seems particularly cruel.


“I never cease to be amazed by the courage and resilience that young people find in response to cancer diagnosis.


“His story was not a story about cancer – it was a story about life and living it to the full.


“When I last saw Stephen I asked him if he had any thoughts on where the funds he helped raise should be spent.


“He told me to carry on doing exactly what we are doing. His wishes will be very much honoured.


“We will make sure Stephen and all young people with cancer are never forgotten.


“Stephen asked us to put the fun into fundraising but he didn’t stop there, he wanted us to put the fun into funeral – so we’ve given it a go.


“Stephen’s positivity and quiet determination to achieve something quite profound has brought a sense of perspective and focus to our lives, showing us that even small gestures can have a huge impact.”


The service was due to end at midnight before the cathedral reopens at 7am on Friday before a private family funeral is held in the afternoon.


Donations continued to be made throughout the service and more than 172,000 had pledged money to his campaign by Thursday evening, which will pay for more nurses and beds for other teenagers with cancer.


Evie wrote on his Justgiving page : “Very touched by your journey, your attitude, your positivity, humour and your big wonderful heart. Massive thumbs up for you.”


Toddlr also posted: “Inspirational young man whose legacy will live on through TCT.”


As the ceremony drew to a close in Lichfield more than £30,000 had been donated in five hours – taking the total to more than £4 million.


When Gift Aid is added to the donations, the campaign has raised more than £4.5 million for the charity.



Stephen Sutton vigil: hundreds give "Thumbs Up" as cathedral bells chime