university grave robbing
last view of the wall
sunlight on Freud's windows
a last view of the tower and wall
end of the old infirmary wall
Freud in the early morning light
old wall in danger
south corner of Freud
side path at Freud
side path of Freud
edge of Freud
Freud side gate
Freud end of wall
south face of Freud
university uglitecture
university pigeon hole blocks
how to ruin an exciting view
St Luke's ambience disenhanced
Radcliffe Infirmary 2013
signs on Walton Street
Little Clarendon Street sign
Lumley's corner repainted
Worcester Place corner
St Paul's with the Observatory
Freud Cafe
window in Freud Cafe
Freud window (1)
Freud window (2)
Freud window (3)
Freud window (4)
Freud window (5)
Freud window (6)
Freud window (7)
Freud window (8)
Freud window (9)
Freud building
before Blavatnik there was sky
Life Goes On
snowing by the canal
Baseplate in the snow
canalside gardens in the snow
snow on the railway line
April snow took us by surprise
Bill Badger on the Oxford Canal
Bill Badger approaching Jericho
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no rest for the dead of Jericho


700 bodies removed from their graves to satisfy the power-crazy Oxford University
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The Blavatnik School of Government, a place of study for a mere 120 students, could quite easily have been accommodated in a discreet two-storey building behind the wall, with the graveyard areas forming a landscaped garden. But no, the university wants an ostentatious six-storey Herzog & de Meuron carbuncle that's going to stick out like a sore thumb amongst the surrounding old buildings and local conservation area, and never mind the 700 bodies they've got to dig up to get their way.
This Blavatnik School of Government is apparently a centre for teaching other countries' governments about good policy making. But they've started by thumbing their nose at Oxford's good policies about height regulations and not-disenhancing the ambience of existing listed buildings.
They say they want the Blavatnik building to be "open" and "transparent", but what they're really doing is setting themselves up in a lofty glass tower that looks down on the plebs and ignores the wishes of the local people. Perhaps it should be renamed the Blavatnik School of Arrogance.
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