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A little gap-filling in London further consolidates Martins’
position as a NATIONAL bank. That the Bank “dares” to
have its Head Office outside London is seen as something of an act of
defiance. Martins does of course
boast the oldest banking service in the country, which started in London on
the site of 68 lombard Street Office back in 1563. Garrick Street, which opens for business in
1955 is also known as Covent Garden branch. Not long after this office opens,
Martins Bank Magazine pays a visit to see what it is like, and also to bring
its readers the flavour of setting up another new arm of the Bank… |
In service: 1955 – 30 September 1971 Image © Martins Bank
Archive Collections |
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In a publication of this
nature we are concerned with people rather than with bricks and mortar and we
do not select branches to visit because of their architectural interest
alone. We have recently decided, however, in view of the fact that the new
branches are of great interest to our readers, to feature each one as it is
opened and to catch up on as many of the recently opened ones as possible. It has to be admitted,
therefore, that many of the new buildings are architecturally interesting and no visit
would be complete which did not attempt to inform readers of current developments
in bank architecture. |
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Branch
Interior Images © Barclays Ref 0030-1043 Many of our
branch buildings are very much out of date and, while representative of the
period in which they were built, it would be quite wrong to perpetuate their
style in our
new buildings. Each generation owes it to posterity to keep up with its own
times and to make its legacy the best possible example of the period in which
it lived. As
will be seen in the photographs the elevation of our Garrick Street branch
is in the form of a grille composed of sculptured, closely-set vertical rods
set against the glazing, the whole within a white marble inner mount and a
black granite outer frame. A
sculptured relief in bronze by Geoffrey Clarke, illustrating by cryptograms
the activities of Covent Garden Market, traverses the whole elevation. Some
might think it looks rather forbidding and overpowering but it is certainly
unique so far as our new buildings are concerned. Inside, the walls are panelled with Indian silver-grey
wood panelling, and doors have the same veneer. |
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Image © Martins Bank Archive
Collections A suspended acoustic ceiling masks the beams supporting the
first floor. A series of attractive
paintings, illustrative of the various facets of activity in Covent Garden — fruit selling, flower selling, printing, and
so on, adorn the walls of the customers' space. The artist is Sally Holliday, a third-year
student of the Graphic Design School at the Royal College of Art. |
Image © Barclays Ref
0030-1043 |
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A picture by Sir Hugh
Casson, the architect of the building, hangs on the wall of the manager's
room.We visited the branch on May 25th and
were surprised to see what a busy little place it has become in such a short
time. Mr. C. J. Carpenter, the Manager, is enjoying his new branch in spite
of the necessity of putting in the much longer hours which a new branch
demands. He entered the Bank in 1925 and his previous service has been at 68
Lombard Street, Fenchurch Street, London District Office, Kingsway and since
1948 at Tothill Street as Pro Manager. His second-in-command is Mr. N. G. Willis
who commenced his service in 1940 at Southampton and came to London in 1949
to District Office. Number three is Mr. J. E. Seabrook who forsook the Civil
Service for the banking profession, as also did Mr. M. J. Handford, who is at
present attached to the branch. The
only girl is Miss P. A. Hollis, a young lady whose work is of a high
standard. She entered the Bank at Garrick Street last year. Because of its situation the customers are widely
representative of different countries and classes, and we were pleased to
entertain Mr. and Mrs. Carpenter at the Arts Theatre Club, which is quite a
good way of getting a bit of the atmosphere of Covent Garden. |
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As Martins Bank Magazine has decided that Garrick Street
Branch is a building “of Architectural Interest”, is it fitting publicity for
the Bank that in 1955, the trade magazine Architectural Review chooses to
publish a feature about it and amongst other things, we are treated to a
photograph of Geoffrey Clarke’s bronze relief depicting the activities of
Covent Garden. The article features a
number of interior photographs, and there is a superb image of the exterior,
which is shown above, and replaces the very grainy picture originally
featured in Martins Bank Magazine’s branch visit. |
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The Manager’s Office Image © Martins Bank
Archive Collections* |
The basement
and ground floor of 23, Garrick Street have been converted to make a branch
office of Martins Bank, consisting of banking hall with clerks’ and cashiers’
working space, manager’s office with ante-room, strong room, cloakroom with
cleaner’s store, and a boiler room. The wooden stair serving basement, ground
and first floors, which was on the west side of the plan facing the front
entrance, was taken out and a reinforced concrete one, in two straight
flights between the half landings, inserted in its place between ground and
basement only, together with a bullion hoist. The public entrance was carried
across to the east side, leading straight into the banking hall, from which
the manager’s office is approached through a waiting area. The
ground-to-basement flight of a second stairway at the rear has been sealed
off, the remainder now affording sole access to the upper floors. A
reinforced concrete floor replaced the previous wood floor, and the wall
piers were cut back and replaced by new piers and concrete underpinning. |
Customer Waiting Area Image © Martins Bank
Archive Collections* |
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The
stair-well is trimmed off by a 9-inch brick wall, supporting a trimmer for
the first floor. Otherwise all internal partitions are breeze. The only other
structural alteration was the removal of an intermediate stanchion in the
main ground floor elevation, to give a clear span: twin reinforced steel
joists were put in, supported on existing but strengthened piers. The
elevation is in the form of a grille composed of sculptured, closely-set
vertical rods set against the glazing, the whole within a white marble inner
‘mount’ and a black granite outer frame, which carries the lettering above. A
sculptured relief in bronze by Geoffrey Clarke, illustrating by cryptograms
the activities of Covent Garden Market, traverses the whole elevation. The
irregularities of the internal wall faces were masked by 1-inch ply Indian
silver-grey wood panelling; the flush doors have same veneer. A suspended
acoustic ceiling masks the beams supporting the first floor. Door linings,
recess trims and built-in furniture are in Honduras mahogany. The banking
hall floor is white cork carpet. A plinth of the same material in black
protects the wall panelling. Heating convectors, served by a gas-fired boiler
in the basement, are set within panelling and furniture. Beside suspended
fluorescent lighting for the cashiers and a desk light fitting for each
clerk, the hall is lighted by tungsten fittings shining on the ceiling |
Front Elevation showing the
Geoffrey Clarke Sculpture Image © Martins Bank
Archive Collections* Front Elevation showing Geoffrey
Clarke Sculpture Image © Martins Bank
Archive Collections* *Some images are the copyright of Architectural Review
and its successors. |
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