Breakfast Television Centre

Breakfast Television Centre

MTV Europe Headquarters in Camden Town as seen in 2015
Location within Greater London
General information
Type Television broadcast facilities
Location South of Camden Lock, London.
Address 17-29 Hawley Crescent London NW1 8TT
Country United Kingdom
Coordinates 51°32′28″N 0°08′36″W / 51.541107°N 0.143351°W / 51.541107; -0.143351Coordinates: 51°32′28″N 0°08′36″W / 51.541107°N 0.143351°W / 51.541107; -0.143351
Completed August 1981
Inaugurated August 1981
Renovated 2012-2013
Owner TV-am (1983–1993)
MTV Europe (1993–present)
Technical details
Floor count 4 (from ground floor)
Design and construction
Architect Sir Terry Farrell
Architecture firm Farrells

Breakfast Television Centre is the former headquarters of TV-am in Camden Town, London, which is now the headquarters of MTV Europe. It was converted from a former car showroom in 1981 to a design by Sir Terry Farrell, and came to be known as Eggcup House because of plastic eggcups on the roof. It has since been extensively renovated.

History

In March 1981, a former car showroom was renovated for the TV-am studios.[1] Sir Terry Farrell won the commission; his design became known for its vibrant postmodernism. There were 'TVAM' letters coming out of the wall, a sunrise archway over the entrance into the forecourt, and a number of plastic egg-cups on the edge of the roof facing the Regent's Canal, which led to the nickname 'Eggcup House'.

Sale to MTV Europe

Former TV-am studios in Camden Lock, since demolished. The TV-am lettering down the side of the fascia covered with discs in 1993.
Camden Lock showing the TV-am eggcups after refurbishment

After TV-am closed, Breakfast Television Centre was sold to MTV Europe in 1993. MTV stated that extra studios were available for commercial hire. The TV-am lettering built into the fascia of the building was covered over with discs, but the eggcups remained on the roof.

Fire

On April 15, 1999, a fire swept through the studios. MTV was forced off the air for several hours and 40 firefighters worked on the fire. The roof and first floor were severely damaged, but the exterior was largely undamaged. The fire was believed to have been started by an electrical fault; no one was injured.[2]

Renovation

In 2011, MTV Networks wanted to make changes to the building, primarily to remove some of the studios and replace them with modern office space. The rear of the building, facing the Regent's Canal, was repainted grey rather than blue, but the structure and the eggcups remained in place. The front of the building was more extensively redeveloped during 2012–2013: the studio block, which had been the site of the original TV-am studios, was demolished, and replaced with a new glazed-fronted office complex.[3] The courtyard between the prior studio and office sections was renovated and reorganised, including the installation of a green wall.

References

  1. "TV-am Studios". Ian White. 2005. Retrieved 2012.
  2. "Fire hits MTV Studios". BBC. 1999. Retrieved 25 June 2015.
  3. "Controversial revamp of TV-am hq slammed". Architects Journal. 2012. Retrieved 2012.

See Also

External Links

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