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Derwent Tower

Derwent Tower
The Rocket - geograph.org.uk - 87646.jpg
Derwent Tower
Alternative names Dunston Rocket
General information
Status Demolished
Address Ellison Road, Gateshead. NE11 9DF
Completed 1972
Demolished 2012
Height 280ft
Design and construction
Architect Owen Luder

Coordinates: 54°57′7.7″N 1°38′21.99″W / 54.952139°N 1.6394417°W / 54.952139; -1.6394417

Derwent Tower (also known as the Dunston Rocket) was a 29-storey residential apartment building in Dunston, Tyne and Wear, United Kingdom. Due to its unusual shape it was nicknamed the "Dunston Rocket" during construction (even before its official Derwent Tower title) and the name remained with locals throughout its life. It has now been demolished.

The tower was designed by the Owen Luder Partnership on behalf of Whickham Council, which controlled the Dunston area of Gateshead. The original brief was for three high-rise blocks of at least 22 storeys, but due to adverse ground conditions on site the decision was made to build one tower, with the rest being low-rise blocks of two to five storeys. Despite the architect's advice against construction of a high-rise building on the site, the council were strongly in favour. Following many consultations and explanatory models of the foundations with specialists, construction of the foundations began in February 1968, and the tower was completed in March 1971.

Construction was complex because of the very poor ground conditions. The foundations were based on a sunken concrete caisson that was built above ground then sunk over a period of time. Caisson foundations are often found in harbour construction; being used in the 1960s for a local authority tower block was a first, and the caisson became an underground garage area for residents.

The tower had a very bold and striking appearance, unlike any other tower block or high rise building in the UK. It was of a Brutalist design with lots of design similarities with Gateshead's "Get Carter car park" also a product of the Owen Luder Partnership. The tower housed two-bedroom flats up to the 10th floor, one-bedroom flats floors 11 to 29. It featured in a 1970s advert for Tudor Crips.


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