Flats were almost unknown in Britain until the 1850s
when they were developed, along with other industrial dwellings, for the
laboring classes. These vast blocks were plainly a convenient means of easing
social conscience by housing large numbers of the ever-present poor on compact
city sites. During the 1880s, however, the idea of living in comfortable
residential chambers caught on with the affluent upper and upper middle classes,
and controversy as to the advantages and disadvantages of flat life was a topic
of conversation around many a respectable dinner-table. In Paris and other major
European cities, the custom whereby the better-off lived in apartments, or
flats, was well established. Up to the late nineteenth century in England only
bachelor barristers had established the tradition of living in rooms near the
Law Court: any self-respecting head of household would insist upon a West End
town house as his London home, the best that his means could provide.
The popularity of flats for the better-off seems to have developed for a
number of reasons. First, perhaps, through the introduction of the railways,
which had enabled a wide range of people to enjoy a holiday staying in a suite
at one of the luxury hotels which had begun to spring up during the previous
decade. Hence, no doubt, the fact that many of the early luxury flats were
similar to hotel suites, even being provided with communal dining-rooms and
central boilers for hot water and heating. Rents tended to be high to cover
overheads, but savings were made possible by these communal amenities and by
tenants being able to reduce the number of family servants.
On
of the earliest substantial London developments of flats for the well-to-do was
begun soon after Victoria Railway Station was opened in 1860, as the train
service provided an efficient link with both the City and the South of
England. Victoria Street, adjacent to both the Station and Westminster,
had already been formed, and under the direction of the architect, Henry Ashton,
was being lined with blocks of residential chambers in the Parisian manner.
These flats were commodious indeed, offering between eight and fifteen rooms
apiece, including appropriate domestic offices. The idea was an emphatic
departure from the tradition of the London house and achieved immediate
success.
Perhaps the most notable block in the vicinity was
Queen Anne’s Mansions, partly designed by E. R. Robson in 1884 and recently
demolished. For many years, this was London’s loftiest building and had strong
claims to be the ugliest. The block was begun as a wild speculation, modeled on
the American skyscraper, and was nearly 200 feet high. The cliff-like walls of
dingy brick completely overshadowed the modest thoroughfare nearby. Although
bleak outside, the mansion flats were palatial within, with sumptuously
furnished communal entertaining and dining rooms. And lifts to the uppermost
floors. The success of these tall blocks of flats could not have been achieved,
of course, without the invention of the lift, or "ascending carriage" as it was
called when first used in the Strand Law Courts in the 1870s. Flats first appeared in Britain in the middle of the 19th century when
______.
A. they were principally built for those families with several
servants
B. people were not conscious of the crowded housing of the less
well-to-do
C. there was increasing concern over accommodation for the poor
D. people became conscious of the social needs of the rural
population