Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

PRYING EYES

Neighbors win privacy feud with UK Tate gallery

- BY JILL LAWLESS

LONDON — The U.K. Supreme Court says people who live in glass houses have a right to privacy too.

The court ruled Wednesday that a viewing platform at London’s Tate Modern art gallery made residents of glass-walled luxury apartments next door feel like animals in a zoo, and impeded “the ordinary use and enjoyment” of their homes.

The justices overturned earlier lower court rulings that sided with Tate Modern in the long-running privacy battle between the gallery — one of London’s biggest tourist attraction­s — and residents of four apartments in the neighborin­g Neo Bankside complex.

Justice George Leggatt said that the platform was visited by hundreds of thousands of people a year, who “frequently take photograph­s of the interiors of the flats and sometimes post them on social media.”

“It is not difficult to imagine how oppressive living in such circumstan­ces would feel for any ordinary person — much like being on display in a zoo,” he wrote in the court’s majority ruling.

“It is beyond doubt that the viewing and photograph­y which take place from the Tate’s building cause a substantia­l interferen­ce with the ordinary use and enjoyment of the claimants’ properties.”

The court ruled that the gallery had violated “the common law of private nuisance.” Three judges backed the majority decision and two dissented.

Tate Modern opened in 2000 in a former power station on the south bank of the River Thames. It helped transform the surroundin­g Bankside neighborho­od from a riverside backwater into an arts and nightlife hub dotted with luxury apartment towers.

The viewing terrace — which has been closed since the coronaviru­s pandemic —is part of a pyramidsha­ped extension that opened in 2016 at the gallery, which sees more than 5 million visitors a year. Neo Bankside was completed a few years earlier.

Lawyers for the residents argued the 10th-floor platform, which attracted more than half a million gallery visitors a year, constitute­d a “relentless” invasion of residents’ privacy. They said gallery visitors subjected the apartments to “intense visual scrutiny,” with some using binoculars and zoom lenses to get a better look.

The gallery said residents could solve the problem by drawing their blinds or putting up curtains — and judges at the High Court and Court of Appeal agreed.

But the Supreme Court found that the viewing platform was an “abnormal” use of Tate Modern’s land, and the beleaguere­d residents had a point.

“The claimants cannot be obliged to live behind net curtains or with their blinds drawn all day every day to protect themselves from the consequenc­es of intrusion caused by the abnormal use which the Tate makes of its land,” the judges said.

The ruling surprised many legal experts.

“Previous court decisions have suggested that if you happen to be overlooked by others, that is just bad luck and you don’t have a legal remedy,” said Richard Cressall, partner at law firm Gordons. “The Supreme Court has decided to put a cap on that.”

 ?? VICTORIA JONES/PA VIA AP, FILE ?? The Tate Modern viewing platform, left, and residentia­l flats, right, in London, Feb. 2, 2019. The U.K. Supreme Court ruled Wednesday that a viewing platform breached the privacy of residents of luxury apartments next door.
VICTORIA JONES/PA VIA AP, FILE The Tate Modern viewing platform, left, and residentia­l flats, right, in London, Feb. 2, 2019. The U.K. Supreme Court ruled Wednesday that a viewing platform breached the privacy of residents of luxury apartments next door.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States