
<P><BR> The Observer's architecture correspondent seems to think that the plot is slipping away from the senior management team at the London's South Bank Centre. Sudic is right about the neglect and the no-go areas. However, my main impression remains of the superb and varied dance programming that goes on there under the committed and astute eye of the Dance Programming Manager Julia Carruthers.<P><BR><B>Stand-off on the South Bank</B> <P>Despite 13 plans in 13 years, London's artistic hub is fast descending into squalor and dereliction. What can be done to rescue it? <P>Deyan Sudjic writes in The Observer <P> <BLOCKQUOTE><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial">quote:</font><HR>In public at least, London's South Bank Centre is putting a brave face on its humiliating inability, six months after it held a high-profile international competition to find an architect to design its new concert hall, to decide which of the two firms it named as joint winners will get the commission. <BR>'We will be putting the brief to them shortly,' says a spokesperson for the South Bank Centre. 'Then they will work on their design, and we will make an appointment by the end of the year.' This bizarre procedure has angered participants in the original competition who had been under the impression that they already had a brief. <P>In private, few people involved with the project believe it will happen. 'It's dead, and the sooner that the centre admits that and starts again, the better,' says one insider. Even the competition chairman, the distinguished American architect Harry Cobb, is reportedly running out of patience, embarrassed by the inability of the South Bank to define exactly what it wants.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE> <P><A HREF="http://www.observer.co.uk/review/story/0,6903,552422,00.html" TARGET=_blank><B>more...</B></A><P><BR><p>[This message has been edited by Stuart Sweeney (edited September 16, 2001).]