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This is a link post Achtung all you London wankers:
Monstrous carbuncle at the Cutty Sark ship at Grenwich.
(, Fri 13 Jul 2012, 10:09, Reply)
This is a normal post So Telegraph readers dislike it.
What a surprise.

I think it's pretty magnificent; and if Telegraph readers disagree, that just makes me more confident of my judgement.

(UPDATE: Although, having just seen the original drawing, that would have been even better.)
(, Fri 13 Jul 2012, 10:27, Reply)
This is a normal post Yeah, the concept pic look better (and nothing like the finished article)
But the end result doesn't look awful.
TaC
(, Fri 13 Jul 2012, 10:33, Reply)
This is a normal post Actually,
there's only a couple of buildings on the list (the Ibis hotel, and the Prince's Trust thing) that I don't like.
(, Fri 13 Jul 2012, 10:38, Reply)
This is a normal post For me the Arcelor Mittal Doctor Octopus thing should win this hands down.
I pass it quite often and it simply does not have a good angle.
(, Fri 13 Jul 2012, 11:23, Reply)
This is a normal post I'm going to reserve judgement on it.
It's certainly not Kapoor's finest hour, though.
(, Fri 13 Jul 2012, 11:29, Reply)
This is a normal post Torygraph comment
Can't some arsonist be paid to do a better job of burning this boat ? Most of the interesting parts of this clipper were burnt to a cinder in the original fire; the restoration was utterly pointless, as well as being hideous. Sell off any remaining genuine wood to a wood carver, and let them make scale models to sell to daft tourists for the next 500 years, in Greenwich or somewhere.
(, Fri 13 Jul 2012, 10:34, Reply)
This is a normal post I like,
'It's 'right on' and and kow-towing to the corporate-left of the architectural establishment and its 'brutalist' and graceless modernist designs.'

I just thought it looked like a wave, personally. And offers better viewing/less arson accessibility.
I approve.
(, Fri 13 Jul 2012, 10:46, Reply)
This is a normal post I think it's a good concept that could have been executed much better
The fact that the window panels are so large makes it look like a B&Q greenhouse. I'd have liked to have seen it with much smaller glass panels - HIGH POLY NOT FOR A GAME
(, Fri 13 Jul 2012, 10:51, Reply)
This is a normal post Urgh.
Was this what they were doing when they set fire to it? Perhaps it'd be better if they'd just left it to burn...
(, Fri 13 Jul 2012, 10:36, Reply)
This is a normal post Andrew Gilligan
unfailingly voices opinions diametrically opposed to mine. It's actually quite useful if I'm not sure where I stand on a topic.
(, Fri 13 Jul 2012, 11:03, Reply)
This is a normal post I quite like it...
The only claim to fame of the Cutty Sark is that it survived the fate of most of its contemporaries. It isn't that old either being of Victorian origin (1869) and constructed of iron clad in timber (which is partly why it survived the fire).

You have to ask the question 'what for', when spending that much on a restoration. In this case the reason is tourism and education rather than the preservation of a national treasure. The nay-sayers have completely missed the point.
(, Fri 13 Jul 2012, 11:37, Reply)
This is a normal post the interior looks quite interesting from the tiny picture I can find on their website
www.rmg.co.uk/upload/img_200/cutty-sark-underneath.jpg

But yeah, not sure what they were thinking with that superstructure. Maybe to hide the struts holding the ship up?
(, Fri 13 Jul 2012, 12:13, Reply)