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Essential
Architecture- The Bund, Shanghai
The Great Northern Telegraph Company Building |
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architect
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Atkinson & Dallas |
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location
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7 The Bund, Shanghai, China |
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date
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1908 |
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style
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Neo-Renaissance |
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construction
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masonry |
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type
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Office
Building |
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Above image
reproduced with the generous permission of Simon Fieldhouse. Copyright Simon
Fieldhouse.
www.simonfieldhouse.com
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A large fire in October 1905, atop the new offices being built for
Shanghai’s first provider of telegraphs and telephones, took over two
hours to extinguish and delayed the completion of the building for a
whole year. The roof collapsed and the entire third floor and attic had
to be rebuilt. The building, which eventually opened in January 1908,
also housed the offices of the British owned Eastern Extension and the
American owned Commercial Cable telegraph companies.
Originally there were three Bund entrances leading to the respective
company offices. The Great Northern Telegraphy Company, a Danish
concern, had laid a line to Beijing in the early 1880s and had completed
the one to Nagasaki before the new offices opened. he building, in
Renaissance style, designed by Atkinson & Dallas, housed some
stare-of-the art equipment, including a pneumatic tube system to handle
the telegrams and a lift made by Smith & Stevens of London. Public
telephones were found in abundance in the ground floor hall.
The Great Northern Telegraphy Company occupied the first floor, and most
of the Bund frontage was given over to a series of fine suites for its
manager, engineer and accountant. The flags of the three nations present
in the building used to fly above the building before the telegraph
offices were moved to a new building in East Yan’an Road, behind No. 1
The Bund, at the end of 1921. In the following year the Commercial Bank
of China, which was previously next door at No. 6, moved its business
into the building. The Bangkok Bank took over part of the premises in
1995 and, as in days gone by when numerous consulates occupied the
Bund’s buildings, the Royal Thai Consulate-General also took up
residence.
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links
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http://web.utk.edu/~plee3/shanghai.html
http://www.simonfieldhouse.com/shanghai.htm |
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www.essential-architecture.com
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