Television House, on
Kingsway
in London
was, from
1955, the London headquarters of Associated-Rediffusion, Independent Television News, the
TV Times magazine, the Independent
Television Companies Association and, at first, Associated TeleVision. It was
later the headquarters of
Rediffusion, London and its
successor,
Thames
Television.
History
Adastral House
The Kingsway area had been redeveloped at the start of the 20th
century from
slums and
tenement housing into a broad avenue with
grand office buildings and expensive town houses.
After the formation of the
Air Ministry
in 1918, headquarters were found on Kingsway and one of two
identical buildings opposite
Bush House
became Adastral House. This was the home of the Air Ministry
through
World War II and became famous
after the war as the central London temperatures and wind speeds
were measured from its roof by the
Met
Office and announced as such during the
BBC
weather forecasts.
Television House
In 1954, the
Independent Television
Authority (ITA) awarded the first two contracts for the new
ITV commercial television system. Because the
BBC had previously held a monopoly on broadcasting, there were no
non-BBC television studio facilities in the UK.
Associated-Rediffusion, as one of the two contractors, needed to
build from scratch a whole new facility. The company had hired
Thomas Brownrigg as General
Manager, partially due to his extensive knowledge of planning and
project management, which would be needed in simultaneously
building a new company and its studios and headquarters.
British Electric Traction,
majority owner of Associated-Rediffusion, bought the freehold on
Adastral House from the government. Brownrigg engaged Bovis Limited
(later
Bovis Construction) to gut
the building internally and build a new suite of offices, technical
facilities and studios to be called Television House. This was
begun in early 1955 and, with a planned start date for ITV of
22 September 1955, was worked on at
great speed, virtually 24 hours a day.
Four small
studios (numbered 7, 8, 9 and 10) were built inside the building,
mainly for current affairs and continuity use (the main large
studios were constructed on the site of the former 20th Century Fox studios in Wembley
in Middlesex
). Additionally, office space and dining
facilities for over 1000 people was created. A suite of management
offices, complete with oak-panelled boardroom, was built.
The original headquarters and studio facilities of ITN were located
on the seventh and eighth floors of the building.
The TV Times, part-owned by Associated-Rediffusion, occupied
offices in the building from 1957 until April 1958.
A computer room, housing an early
mainframe computer that controlled
advertising bookings, was added on the second floor in 1966.
Associated TeleVision (ATV) inhabited Television House for the
first few years of broadcasting, mainly just for office
accommodation rather than studio facilities. For a period early in
ITV's history, Associated-Rediffusion provided this space for free
as part of the effort to keep ITV afloat during the financial
crisis of 1955-1957.
St Catherine's House
In the 1967 ITV contract round, the ITA awarded the London weekday
contract to a joint company made up of
ABC Weekend TV and
Rediffusion Television, Thames Television. This new company had a
surplus number of studios in London. The Wembley studios were
therefore sold to the new
London Weekend Television. Thames,
controlled by the former ABC, decided that a brand new studio
complex, equipped from the start for colour broadcasting and
located out of the centre of London would be more
appropriate.
Thames
used Television House as its headquarters whilst the building of
the new Thames Television
House in Euston
took
place.
When
Television House was vacated in the early 1970s, it was again
occupied by the government, this time the General Register Office, where it
housed the birth certificates of the English
and Welsh
populations. The building was renamed to St Catherine's
House.
In the
1990s, the building was vacated by the General Register Office,
which moved to Southport
in Merseyside, and, after
extensive refurbishment, it became the UK headquarters of ExxonMobil.
Centrium
After ExxonMobil left and further redevelopment work took place in
2007, the building is now called "Centrium" and is
multiple-occupancy offices.
Production space
- Studio 7: 702 sq ft = 65 m². 33' by 24' = 10 m x 7.3 m
- Studio 8: 950 sq ft = 88.3 m². 38' by 25' = 11.6 m x 7.6 m
- Studio 9: 2416 sq ft = 224.5 m². 64' by 40' = 19.5 m x 12.2
m
- Studio 10: 312 sq ft = 29 m². 26' by 12' = 8 m x 3.7 m
- Master Control: 900 sq ft = 83.6 m².
- Maintenance Workshop: 1150 sq ft = 107 m².
- VTR (with 2x Ampex
video recorders): 320 sq ft = 30 m².
- Telecine (with 2x Cintel, 1x RCA Vidicon and 2x EMI Flying Spot
telecine machines): 1150 sq ft = 107 m².
- Rehearsal rooms x6: 7500 sq ft = 697 m².
- Projector theatres x 6
- Cutting rooms x15
- Dubbing theatre
References
- Croston, Eric ITV 1963 London: Independent Television
Authority 1963
- Various authors A Guide to Rediffusion Television
Studios London: Rediffusion Television Ltd April 1967
- Elliott, Ronald (Ed.) Fusion: Associated-Rediffusion's
House Magazine number 19, June 1961
- Graham, Russ J London Calling undated, accessed 21 February 2006
- Centrium, accessed 7 February 2008
External links