The £150
million cost of refurbishing the royal palace is small beer, of course,
compared to the estimates for refurbishing the Palace of Westminster which were
floated last week, but there is nevertheless a common thread. In both cases, it is proposed to spend large
sums of money on repairing and patching up old buildings which are not suitable
for purpose now and will still not be suitable for purpose when the work is
completed. Doing them up a bit as
tourist attractions is one thing, but pretending that the result will be
buildings which are fit for the 21st century is simply delusional.
But, in another
analogy with ‘our’ heritage, pretending that delusion is reality seems to be
mainstream accepted consensus. It never
ceases to amaze me how quickly people who walk in through the doors of the
Palace of Westminster become wedded to the place with all its peculiar foibles
and arcane practices, and end up believing that it’s the only possible way of
doing things.
In any rational
world, the fact that Parliament is falling apart would be seen as an opportunity
to find or design a building which actually had enough seats and office space
for all the members, and which enabled them to vote in seconds at their seats
rather then spending hours walking in circles so that they can be counted like
a farmer counts his sheep. (And a
building fit for purpose would raise an awful lot of questions about other
processes and procedures as well.)
A crumbling
royal palace should be a good opportunity to ask whether a family which
actually lives in a nine-room apartment really needs a 775 room palace (to say
nothing of the other palaces). Or why a
largely ceremonial monarchy with no real power over anything needs so many
staff and offices.
It is, though,
in the nature of ‘our’ heritage, jerry-built with shoddy materials as it is, to
never ask such impertinent questions, let alone expect our rulers to answer
them. Clinging on to the past is all
they seem to know, even when it’s literally collapsing around them.
2 comments:
This was spot on
I thought the analogy of MPs as sheep was perceptive but if you ask for the names of MPs you only get Cameron these days these rest are non entities and he is waiting for his time to be over
I thought that jerry built was a bit OTT as they make magnificent houses. but then I remembered that it was built not by Germans but for a German family who changed their name very rapidly
when a family squabble with their German relatives got out of hand
Essentially it is an English problem we in Wales should not contribute a single Ceiniog to its repair or rebuild if that proves to be the way forward and that goes for both Buck House and the Houses of Parliament
Contrary to popular belief, the term 'jerry-built' was in use before the word jerry became a pejorative term for German, and no analogy with anything or any person of Germanic origin was intended.
Post a Comment