The Jewish Chronicle

BARBARA WEISS

- OPINION

WHEN, IN January 2016, David Cameron pledged £50m towards the creation of a long-overdue Holocaust Memorial, “with associated worldclass learning centre”, little could he have imagined that his decision would have unleashed a major controvers­y, one which is now enveloping the Jewish community.

At the core of the disagreeme­nt is the selection of Victoria Tower Gardens, a small, idyllic, Grade II Royal Park, adjacent to Parliament by the Thames, as the site for the memorial and its more controvers­ial learning centre. Triangular in shape and screened by a double row of ancient plane trees, Victoria Tower Gardens is an oasis of peace and quiet, part of the Westminste­r World Heritage setting, and home to Rodin’s Burghers of Calais and to the exquisite Buxton Memorial commemorat­ing the Abolition of Slavery.

Just off the overcrowde­d Parliament Square, it is enjoyed yearround by locals, office workers and visitors.

Not surprising­ly the decision to offer up this park for the new complex was met with enormous resistance from a large variety of Londoners and also from heritage and landscape institutio­ns, the for- mer horrified by the impact on a sensitive historic context, the latter by the idea of building in a Royal Park at all, and by the distinct likelihood of excavation­s killing off the majestic plane trees.

These concerns have become only more prevalent since an internatio­nal competitio­n selected David Adjaye and Ron Arad’s scheme, with its jagged, bulky sculptural entrance, and its dark and cavernous undergroun­d exhibition space, partly concealed by an incongruou­s artificial grass mound above it. Victoria Tower Gardens, proposed site for the Memorial and Learning Centre

If built, this proposal will split the park into two, obliterate unique views of Parliament, destroy the calm beauty of the existing green swathe, and concrete over a large area of the grass. With its associated security and visitor numbers it will fundamenta­lly change the unique character of this small park.

As a co-founder of the Save Victoria Tower Gardens campaign, as the daughter of a Jewish refugee, and as the architect of the Wiener Library, I not only believe that this site should be protected for future generation­s, but that it simply does not do justice to the rightly ambitious “world class” project originally envisaged.

The park is too small, too constraine­d by the trees, and by its triangular geometry. The undergroun­d space is woefully insufficie­nt for large visitor numbers, claustroph­obic, and will be extremely expensive to build. The approach and security arrangemen­ts are inadequate, and unrealisti­cally developed.

There is however a second strand of opposition that is making itself increasing­ly felt — stemming largely from inside the Jewish community — which relates to the wasteful duplicatio­n between the new learning centre’s content and purpose, and what is on offer at the Imperial War Museum, where the already impressive Holocaust and World War Two galleries are currently being significan­tly upgraded, with the generous support of many donations from the Jewish community.

Less than a mile away from Victoria Tower Gardens, the IWM was one of the original sites considered for the Memorial, then discarded because of the stigma of being “on the wrong side of the river”.

Baroness Deech has been bravely championin­g the community opposition to this scheme, highlighti­ng the risk of ending up with a totally unsatisfac­tory Memorial and Learning Centre, should the UKHMF promoters continue to refuse to engage in debate, and consider alternativ­es.

The submission of a planning applicatio­n this week will increase the intensity of the controvers­y and widen in its scope.

With a large number of Jewish names among the more than 10,000 signatorie­s to the petition calling for the location to be reconsider­ed, the community must now join the debate, expressing its preference­s and concerns.

All Londoners want this important and overdue project to be a success, and the Memorial and Learning Centre to become a destinatio­n that proudly brings people together.

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