TV Home Forum

ITV abandons the South Bank

(February 2017)

This site closed in March 2021 and is now a read-only archive
NT
Night Thoughts
Royal visit due next week (presumably not to start knocking the place down)



Last edited by Night Thoughts on 25 January 2018 4:18pm - 2 times in total
NT
Night Thoughts
Planning meeting scheduled for 6 February:
https://moderngov.lambeth.gov.uk/ieListDocuments.aspx?MId=10128&EVT=101&DT=A
BL
bluecortina
Royal visit due next week (presumably not to start knocking the place down)





Perhaps the Duke of Kent is busy elsewhere.
BW
BroadcastWales
Royal visit due next week (presumably not to start knocking the place down)




Does any one know why one of the windows on the right of the tower is untinted whilst every other window is tinted?

(Random question i know)
:-(
A former member
It used to be used by lwt news. It's now offices.
IS
Inspector Sands

Does any one know why one of the windows on the right of the tower is untinted whilst every other window is tinted?

It was studio 10. They used it for their local programmes in the late 80's and early 90's. Originally it was for a strand called Weekend Live which was an attempt to do studio based links between the programmes all weekend. They replaced the window frames with narrower ones to make the view better


Details here:

http://www.tvstudiohistory.co.uk/studio%20history.htm#tls
It is perhaps not that widely known that there was once a studio 10 at LWT. It was built on floor 10 of the main office block during 1988 and was often referred to as the 'tenth floor studio'. Despite its small size it was equipped with five BTS LDK 90 cameras which were later updated by the 91/93 version. This 950 sq ft studio (33ft x 29ft wall to wall with an 8ft grid height) was originally created for a new kind of on-air presentation which, for the first time, exploited the views across London. This was marketed as The Weekend Live and began on 13th January 1989. The idea behind this new presentation style was to consolidate LWTs identity 'as a broadcaster for London, broadcasting from London' (it says here) - and to underline this with a live view of the Thames. Ironically, some might say, to steal the thunder of ITV weekday broadcaster Thames TV, who despite their name only ever showed a stylised photo graphic of the river. Continuity links were moved to this studio for certain parts of the weekend - although curiously not using the usual continuity announcers. Mike Smith, the radio DJ, was one of the new presenters.

I'm told that the programme department responsible for 'The Weekend Live' ordered all the technical equipment for the studio themselves without involving the LWT engineering department as they might 'complicate things.' Inevitably, after several disastrous breakdowns on air it was all ripped out and replaced with better kit a few months later and the floor plan of the studio and control rooms was redesigned.

Studio 10 was used in 1990 as a call centre for ITV's Telethons, plus some of their other network programmes involving phone-ins. I'm told that it was also used for Cilla Black's Surprise Surprise for some live inserts. The studio became home to Police 5, Crime Monthly, LWT News, 6 O'Clock Live and a range of other local programmes including The Sunday Match.

6 O' Clock Live followed on from the popular 6 O'Clock Show, which had been made in studio 2. It ran from 1990 to the end of 1992 and was presented at various times by Danny Baker, Jeni Barnett, Frank Bough and Joanna Sheldon. When LNN began broadcasting from the new studio 7 in 1993, studio 10 was used less and less. It was never digitised - although it did have some widescreen capability through a sub-mixer. Studio 10 was eventually to become home to Talk TV - one of the early new Granada channels, and later to EuroTransMed which, for many years, broadcast medical discussion programmes to hospitals throughout the world. Channel Four's Business Daily also came from this studio for a while.

Studio 10 was converted back into offices around 2002/2003 but its original location can still be seen if you look at the north east corner of the building from outside as the windows it used are a slightly different shape and colour from all the others.
DE88 and BroadcastWales gave kudos
BW
BroadcastWales

Does any one know why one of the windows on the right of the tower is untinted whilst every other window is tinted?

It was studio 10. They used it for their local programmes in the late 80's and early 90's. Originally it was for a strand called Weekend Live which was an attempt to do studio based links between the programmes all weekend. They replaced the window frames with narrower ones to make the view better


Details here:

http://www.tvstudiohistory.co.uk/studio%20history.htm#tls
It is perhaps not that widely known that there was once a studio 10 at LWT. It was built on floor 10 of the main office block during 1988 and was often referred to as the 'tenth floor studio'. Despite its small size it was equipped with five BTS LDK 90 cameras which were later updated by the 91/93 version. This 950 sq ft studio (33ft x 29ft wall to wall with an 8ft grid height) was originally created for a new kind of on-air presentation which, for the first time, exploited the views across London. This was marketed as The Weekend Live and began on 13th January 1989. The idea behind this new presentation style was to consolidate LWTs identity 'as a broadcaster for London, broadcasting from London' (it says here) - and to underline this with a live view of the Thames. Ironically, some might say, to steal the thunder of ITV weekday broadcaster Thames TV, who despite their name only ever showed a stylised photo graphic of the river. Continuity links were moved to this studio for certain parts of the weekend - although curiously not using the usual continuity announcers. Mike Smith, the radio DJ, was one of the new presenters.

I'm told that the programme department responsible for 'The Weekend Live' ordered all the technical equipment for the studio themselves without involving the LWT engineering department as they might 'complicate things.' Inevitably, after several disastrous breakdowns on air it was all ripped out and replaced with better kit a few months later and the floor plan of the studio and control rooms was redesigned.

Studio 10 was used in 1990 as a call centre for ITV's Telethons, plus some of their other network programmes involving phone-ins. I'm told that it was also used for Cilla Black's Surprise Surprise for some live inserts. The studio became home to Police 5, Crime Monthly, LWT News, 6 O'Clock Live and a range of other local programmes including The Sunday Match.

6 O' Clock Live followed on from the popular 6 O'Clock Show, which had been made in studio 2. It ran from 1990 to the end of 1992 and was presented at various times by Danny Baker, Jeni Barnett, Frank Bough and Joanna Sheldon. When LNN began broadcasting from the new studio 7 in 1993, studio 10 was used less and less. It was never digitised - although it did have some widescreen capability through a sub-mixer. Studio 10 was eventually to become home to Talk TV - one of the early new Granada channels, and later to EuroTransMed which, for many years, broadcast medical discussion programmes to hospitals throughout the world. Channel Four's Business Daily also came from this studio for a while.

Studio 10 was converted back into offices around 2002/2003 but its original location can still be seen if you look at the north east corner of the building from outside as the windows it used are a slightly different shape and colour from all the others.

Thankyou for that information. Must have been a very small studio but I can imagine the view being very impressive.
EG
eggsontoast

Thankyou for that information. Must have been a very small studio but I can imagine the view being very impressive.

http://i65.tinypic.com/2hr1rnp.jpg
http://i65.tinypic.com/18zyhu.png
KE
kernow
I've heard that Blue Peter has a permanent studio set-up. For a show that's only on once a week to have a permanent set, there can't be that much demand for the available studio space there.
JK
JKDerry
Blue Peter are based on one of their smaller studios, in HQ7 which is 1,600 Sq Ft, so Blue Peter could remain in their for as long as they like, as it is a very small studio. HQ5 and HQ6 are 1,000 Sq Ft each and are used for CBBC and Cbeebies presentation.
JK
JKDerry

In their application it says 3,634 sqm to be used for studios, that is very small indeed to fit GMB, Lorraine, Loose Women and This Morning in when/if they really bother to return in a few years time.
JK
JKDerry
If ITV settle in very well to Studios 2 and 3 at Television Centre, it could be a fact that they decide not to return to the South Bank site and remain at Television Centre.

Newer posts