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Barbara Weiss

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Barbara Weiss,

Barbara Weiss

Opinion

Westminster is the wrong place for the Holocaust Memorial

A small park is not the best location for a Holocaust Memorial, says Barbara Weiss

December 27, 2018 11:48
Victoria Tower Gardens, proposed site for the Memorial and Learning Centre
2 min read

When, in January 2016, David Cameron pledged £50m towards the creation of a long-overdue Holocaust Memorial, “with associated world-class learning centre”, little could he have imagined that his decision would have unleashed a major controversy, one which is now enveloping the Jewish community.

At the core of the disagreement is the selection of Victoria Tower Gardens, a small, idyllic, Grade II Royal Park, adjacent to Parliament by the Thames, as the site for the memorial and its more controversial learning centre. Triangular in shape and screened by a double row of ancient plane trees, Victoria Tower Gardens is an oasis of peace and quiet, part of the Westminster World Heritage setting, and home to Rodin’s Burghers of Calais and to the exquisite Buxton Memorial commemorating the Abolition of Slavery.

Just off the overcrowded Parliament Square, it is enjoyed year-round by locals, office workers and visitors.

Not surprisingly the decision to offer up this park for the new complex was met with enormous resistance from a large variety of Londoners and also from heritage and landscape institutions, the former horrified by the impact on a sensitive historic context, the latter by the idea of building in a Royal Park at all, and by the distinct likelihood of excavations killing off the majestic plane trees.