Thursday 25 May 2023

Bristol Derives 3: Remembridge [re_configure]

 


All Photo-Manipulations: May 2023


[Reconfigured Appropriated Text]:


Categories of Listed Building


There are three types of listed status for buildings in England and Wales 

  • Grade I: Buildings of exceptional interest: 
            [a.]:  Monuments of recognisable/instantaneous poetic resonance [including the 
                    deliciously mundane, as well as the weird and/or eerie]
            [b.]:  Monuments likely to trigger artistic activity [on a sliding scale of 
                    relevance/irrelevance]
             
  • Grade II*: Particularly important buildings of more than special interest:
             [a.]:  Key monuments of autobiographical significance [verifiable/documented by                        photographic or other historical evidence]
            [b.]:  Key monuments of autobiographical significance [imagined or subject to false                            memory, and including elements of personal mythology/fake                     
                    narrative, dreams, neurosis or other psychologoclgical disorder]
              
  • Grade II: Buildings that are of special interest:
             [a.]:  Monuments suspended in an indeterminate/provisional/unresolved 'present'
            [b.]:  Monuments pointing towards past/future simultaneously [cyclical/vertical-slice 
                    chronology]
            [c.]:  Monuments to lost/imagined futures, failed utopias, misguided strategies, as well as                     those likely to play significant role in proposed future archeologies
            [d.]:  Portals
      
                        

There was formerly a non-statutory Grade III, which was abolished in 1970. This included monuments related to delusion, pharmaceutical intoxication, hallucination, baseless rumour, conspiracy theory, pseudoscience, parochial superstition and excess religiosity.


Listed buildings account for about 2% of English building stock. In March 2010, there were about 374,000 list entries of which 92% were Grade II, 5.5% were Grade II*, and 2.5% were Grade I. 













Statutory Criteria


The criteria for listing include architectural interest, historic interest and close historical associations with significant people or events. Buildings not individually noteworthy may still be listed if they form part of a group that is—for example, all the buildings in a square. This is called 'group value'. Sometimes large areas comprising many buildings may not justify listing but receive the looser protection of designation as a conservation area.

 

The specific criteria include:

  • The nocturnal march to some inner venue [the search for connection]
  • Short-circuiting an adjacent existence [the south bank of the south bank]
  • The most recent incision [a jump onto the Spike] 
  • A winding path between the Bonds [the cliff of blank eyes/a thousand cells]
  • Corroded mesh and blistering angle-iron [the threaded encroachment/an unwanted seeding]
  • Steel plate erosion [river glimpses between an awkward measure]
  • The shadow lattice [altitude projectors on quivering stems]
  • An abandoned shunt [the decommissioning/the carbon traces]


The state of repair of a building, or degree of applicable on-line outrage, are not deemed to be  relevant considerations for listing. [1.]










[1.]:  Includes excerpts from: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Listed_building






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