Explore Collections Explore The Collections
You are here: CollectionsOnline  /  Drawings

Court of Equity, 1825-26 (7)

Design Note:-
There are no surviving design or working drawings for the Court of Equity. The earliest relate to a survey of the Court as completed, undertaken on 9 October 1825 (SM 53/5/20-SM 53/5/20v) clearly undertaken by a junior hand amongst Soane’s pupils. They are here associated with Charles Richardson, who entered Soane’s office in February 1824. They can be compared with survey drawings of the Court’s furnishings dated to 15 - March the following year, undertaken by Stephen Burchell (SM 53/5/21-SM 53/5/21v). It should be noted that, as was not uncommon in the Law Courts, the furnishings closely followed those provided in the period Courtrooms. The interior, complete with furnishings, was included amongst Joseph Gandy’s interior views taken in the first half of August 1826 (SM Vol 61/59-SM Vol 61/60). Located in behind the completed northern range of The Stone Building along St Margaret’s Street to the west, and the Court of King’s Bench to the north, Soane’s design not only responded to the implicit necessity for lighting from above, but also honed the interior to integrate it into its architectural context.

The main source of direct light was provided by the lantern light, which by enclosing arched openings within its inner faces, echoed that of the Court of Chancery. The four glazed tympana above this bore a direct relationship to the designs for the lantern lights over the Courts of King’s Bench and Exchequer (see SM 53/3/11 and SM Vol 61/58 respectively). Additional light reached the interior via arched ‘clerestory’ windows, whose varying lengths were dictated by adjacent accommodation. Internally, however, they were framed by pseudo-Serliana openings, with large rectangular moulded panels between. This provided a regular architectural rhythm to the interior, effectively diverting attention from the unavoidable variance (SM Vol 61/60). The Serliana motif was clearly derived from the example offered by The Stone Building and the same feature was deployed for the interior of the adjacent Court of King’s Bench. As elsewhere, the common architectural elements may well have served to demonstrate the shared practice of jurisprudence between the Common Law Courts.

More singular and distinctive was Soane’s handling of the junction between the internal base of the lantern light and the ceiling. The latter had an S-curve profile, as recorded in SM 53/5/20v, which may have been a characteristic shared with other lanterns. More remarkable ae the four rows of canopy arches which surround the opening along its north and south sides; design elements Soane has originally experimented with in a comparable position in his early designs for the Vice-Chancellor’s Court.
Architectural & Other Drawings results view
Select list view result
Select thumbnail view result
Architectural & Other Drawings results view
Select list view result
Select thumbnail view result