Some cities present themselves neatly. Others only reveal themselves
from the side, in the service road, under the bridge, behind the civic
building where nobody was meant to linger. Bristol, perhaps more than
most, belongs to the second category. Its public face is easy enough to
identify: Clifton, the bridge, the harbour, Georgian terraces, student
cafes, hills, postcard drops of light over the Avon Gorge. But there is
another Bristol too, harder, stranger, more provisional. A Bristol of
underpasses, concrete walkways, civic backsides, rain-stained walls and
fluorescent windows. These two photographs seem to hold both versions
of the city in suspension.
The first image, taken
behind the old police station in 1984, is almost aggressively
unpicturesque. It is not trying to charm anyone. There is no harbour
glimmer, no terrace elegance, no "historic Bristol" being offered up for
approval. Instead, we are in one of those back-of-city spaces that
British urban planning produced in abundance after the war: a narrow
road hemmed in by brick, concrete, office windows, walkways and shop
units. The city not as spectacle, but as infrastructure.
Overhead, enclosed bridges cross the street like institutional
arteries. They do not invite you to look up so much as remind you that
the real business of the place is happening elsewhere, behind glass,
above street level, in corridors and offices. The street below feels
like a leftover channel, somewhere you pass through rather than arrive
in. Even the shops have the air of temporary tenants in someone else's
plan.
And yet the photograph is compelling precisely because of this
ordinariness. The mundane details now become the emotional charge: the
bin in the road, the dull double yellow lines, the small shop signs, the
pedestrians walking away, the faint glow of interior lights in an
office block. Nobody in the scene is posing for history. Nobody seems
aware that this ordinary Bristol afternoon will one day become almost
unrecoverable.
That is the peculiar ache of such images. The past is rarely arranged
like a memory while we are living through it. It is mostly made of
errands, side streets, dead time, unremarkable buildings and moments
spent going somewhere else. Later, these overlooked places become
portals. The unattractive becomes precious because it was not preserved
for us. It survived only by accident.
The old Bridewell site has a longer and messier history than the
photograph needs to explain. The Island's own account says the Central
Police Station complex was built in 1928 and opened as a police station
in November 1930, on Nelson Street, near the site of an earlier station.
By the time this picture was taken, the building was already moving
toward its afterlife. Avon and Somerset Constabulary had been created in
1974, headquarters functions started moving out the following year, and
the remaining CID offices left in 1986 when the New Bridewell Police
Station was completed across the road.
So the photograph catches the place in a particular middle condition.
Not historic yet. Not dead. Not quite modern anymore.
The image has the mood of municipal modernism after the optimism has
drained out of it. Those concrete walkways once belonged to a future:
efficient, elevated, planned, rational. By 1984, they already look
tired. The rain has found them. The concrete has darkened. The dream of
circulation and civic order has become a damp canyon behind a police
station.
It is easy to mock this kind of architecture, and often it deserves it.
But the photograph does something subtler. It shows the melancholy
dignity of a failed future. These buildings were not ancient, not yet
ruins, not still new. They occupied that strange middle age of the urban
landscape, when yesterday's progress has become today's background.
If that first photograph is Bristol as back corridor, the second is
Bristol as apparition. The Clifton Suspension Bridge, seen
from the bottom of the Avon Gorge in February 1992, is familiar and
unfamiliar at once. The bridge itself is instantly recognisable, but the
angle changes everything. We are not up at Clifton Observatory, not on
the elegant side of the city, not looking at a tourist view. We are down
below, at river level, where the gorge is steep and shadowed, where the
road runs tight against the cliff and the Avon withdraws into mud at low
tide.
From here the bridge appears almost impossible: a thin white line drawn
across blue air, suspended between two enormous masses of stone. It is
more idea than object. The road, cars, tunnel mouth, lamp post and
warning sign pull the scene back into the early 1990s, but the bridge
itself seems to exist outside the photograph's date. It belongs to
another scale of time.
That contrast is what makes the image work. The gorge is geological
time. The bridge is Victorian time. The road is twentieth-century time.
The cars are 1992. The photograph is now memory. All these layers sit
together in one frame, and none of them fully cancels the others.
The light helps. February light can be cruelly beautiful: pale, cold,
clarifying. Here it gives the scene a kind of blue distance. The trees
are bare, the river is low, and the gorge recedes into haze. It does not
feel cosy or picturesque. It feels like a threshold, a place of
departure, arrival, passing through. Bristol as a gap between rock and
sky.
The bridge is an obvious icon, but the official history is stranger
than the iconography. The Clifton Suspension Bridge Trust describes it
as a bridge completed after Brunel's death by John Hawkshaw and William
Henry Barlow, opened on 8 December 1864, and still maintained through
the toll system. That helps explain why the photograph feels layered
rather than merely scenic. The bridge is a Victorian engineering object
that still carries daily traffic, a tourist image that remains a working
piece of infrastructure. It is not just looked at. It is used.
The two images seem, at first, to have little in common. One is cramped,
grey, urban, almost claustrophobic. The other is open, blue,
monumental. One shows the city's discarded modernity; the other shows
its enduring icon. One belongs to the service entrance, the other to the
civic myth. But they share something essential: both are images of
things that continue without us.
This may be why photographs of places can feel more unsettling than
photographs of people. A face declares its vulnerability. A building, a
bridge, a road, a cliff, these simply remain. They do not mourn the
versions of us who passed through them. The city carries on, altering
itself, erasing itself, repainting itself, demolishing one decade and
marketing another.
The first photograph may show a Bristol that has largely vanished:
shops renamed, buildings altered or demolished, walkways removed,
traffic systems changed. The second shows a Bristol that still appears
to exist, because the bridge remains. Even there the continuity is
deceptive. The exact February air is gone. The particular cars are gone.
The quietness of that road, the colour of that film stock, the early
1990s atmosphere, all gone. The permanent landmark only makes the
vanished details more visible.
We think we want the monument, but it is often the incidental that
hurts. A lamp post. A shop sign. A road marking. The shape of a bin. The
colour of fluorescent light in an office window. The precise shade of a
winter sky in 1992. The old city does not return as a grand historical
narrative. It returns as texture.
There is also a faintly hauntological
quality to both images. Not because they show ghosts, but because they
show futures that failed to remain future. The 1984 street is haunted
by the post-war promise of planned urban life. The 1992 gorge is
haunted by the Victorian sublime, by the idea that engineering could
draw a perfect line across a natural void. In both cases, the image
contains a vanished confidence.
And yet neither photograph is simply nostalgic. Nostalgia often tidies
the past. These images do not. The concrete street is bleak. The gorge
road is not romantic in any soft sense. The river mud is exposed, the
shadows are hard, the urban fabric is compromised. What makes them
moving is not that the past was better. It is that the past was real,
physically, stubbornly real, and yet is now unreachable.
You could go to Bristol now and stand near these places. You could find
the bridge, walk the gorge, search for the old police station area,
compare street views, identify what changed and what survived. But you
could not step into either photograph. You could not recover the smell
of the street behind the police station in 1984, the sound of those
cars, the exact rhythm of that weekday. You could not re-enter February
1992, with that blue air and those shadows and that particular version
of the Avon below the bridge. The laws of physics, annoyingly, remain
firm on this point, and time refuses planning permission.
What remains, then, is the photograph: not a doorway, but evidence.
Evidence that these arrangements of matter and light once existed.
Evidence that the city had these moods. Evidence that people passed
through them, mostly unaware that they were moving through what would
later become history.
Together, the two images form a small portrait of Bristol's split
personality. Bristol the concrete back passage; Bristol the sublime
gorge. Bristol the failed precinct; Bristol the impossible bridge.
Bristol as damp municipal afterthought; Bristol as suspended dream. The
real city is the tension between them, the place where a stained
concrete walkway and a world-famous suspension bridge can belong to the
same emotional geography.
Cities store time unevenly. Some things endure. Some things are erased.
Some survive but no longer mean what they meant. And some, by being
photographed almost casually, become more vivid after they have
disappeared than they ever were when they stood before us.