He deserves his reputation
as a pure genius - and also as a bit of a prat.
But in his new King's Cross penthouse, Sir Clive
Sinclair is lord of all he surveys. By
ROSIE MILLARD
I'm not suggesting a loft conversion above
King's Cross Station is the same as Sir Norman
Foster's 1,265ft-high monolith, planned for the
City of London, but both Sir Clive Sinclair's new
penthouse pad, designed for one person, and Sir
Norman's tower, designed for two banks and a
hotel, are, in their way, on the same grand
millennial scale.
'It is rather wonderful,' says Sir Clive, with
slightly more than a touch of the understatement.
We are padding about on his open-air terrace one
hundred feet above King's Cross Station. Below
us, the station's double arches are in a constant
state of admitting and expelling dozens of
brightly lit trains; behind it looms the single
dark vault of St Pancras. Over to the left is the
winking pyramid top of Canary Wharf; far behind
the myriad spires of Wren is the Palace of
Westminster. Behind us rears the black mound of
Highgate Hill.
Although the penthouse itself is all elegance
and minimalism, its location is not exactly
salubrious. Indeed, it backs onto one of
Britain's most notorious red-light areas on one
side, and onto one of its largest rave clubs on
the other. 'I like the communications around
here,' says Clive, when asked to comment on the
suitability of his new neighbourhood. A somewhat
unconventional answer, that, but then Sir Clive
is a hardly a conventional bloke.
Probably the country's best-known inventor, he
was knighted in 1983 and yet does not quite fit
in with the established image of a scientist.
He's celebrated as a genius, and is chairman of
Mensa. Divorced from his wife of 22 years, by
whom he has three grown-up children, he is also
well known for stepping out with a succession of
young glamour-pusses. 'The boffin, the blondes
and the curious chemistry of sexual desire' read
one tabloid headline last year. His tremendous
technological advances - the first pocket
calculator, the first populist personal computer
(the Spectrum) in 1979, digital watches -
suddenly made electronics available to most
people in this country. Yet his popularity did
not save him from derision when some of his
inventions, such as the C5 electric car in 1985,
didn't quite catch on. None of these
contradictions seem to grab him at all. In fact,
Clive is much keener on solving problems like
individual flight or bicycles that will fold up
like an umbrella.
Back downstairs, we are quaffing gin and tonic
in the spectacular glass and steel observatory
that he calls a sitting-room. 'I heard about loft
conversions five years ago, and I've been
searching for one ever since,' he says.
Previously, he was living in somewhat cramped
conditions in a Mayfair flat. His life was on
hold and his furniture in storage, due to rather
complicated antics with various women and to the
sale of his vast family houses in Chelsea and
Cambridge.
And then he chanced upon Battlebridge Basin,
an area next door to King's Cross Station.
Battlebridge Basin, legend has it, was christened
to honour a tremendous fight between Boudicca and
the 14th and 20th Roman Legions (she lost and is
supposedly buried underneath what is now Platform
10). Currently a rather seedy area of kebab shops
and car-washes around the Grand Union Canal, it
also boasts York Central, a tall white warehouse
which advertises itself as having 'The Largest
Loft Conversions in London'. Clive bought the top
two floors; David Bailey has since snapped up the
one below.
From the personal lift entrance onwards (you
know you've arrived somewhere in life when you
have a lift entrance of your own), it's clear
that Clive is as fond of this new habitat as any
(or all) of his inventions. York Central has
been, at various times, a sacking factory, a
wedding-dress manufacturer and a storage place
for Royal British Legion poppies. When Clive
bought his share in it from developers London
Buildings, it was derelict. Since then,
architects Harper McKay moved in and built him a
three-bedroomed apartment that houses his office,
two kitchens, two bathrooms, a study and the
glass-walled sitting-room. The cost? 'I will only
say it was somewhere in the region of £750,000,'
he admits meekly. Some of his less successful
inventions may have cost him dear, but he is
clearly still a very rich man. There are three
things to remember about Clive Sinclair. First,
he doesn't really give a damn. 'Do I wish I was
like Bill Gates (of
Microsoft-and-richest-man-in-the-world fame)?
Absolutely not at all.' Second, he's an
enthusiast. He still has his name and number in
Directory Enquiries, and DIY inventors are always
using it. They ring Clive up with their own
inventions, and he is rather sweet to them down
the phone. And third, he's not interested in
looking back, not awfully. There's a glass
cabinet in his new office with a few of his
inventions scattered in it (prototype digital
watches, calculators, the Spectrum, that sort of
thing). They may have changed the way we live,
but their inventor is not overly concerned as to
whether you notice them, or not.
He's certainly not mad about discussing his
high-profile chairmanship of Mensa. One suspects
that Clive has, at long last, got rather fed up
with Mensa (possibly due to Press fascination
with those famous weekends for members where the
intercourse does not just involve the
cerebellum). At any rate, he's decided to throw
in the towel and, after 16 years at the top, he's
stepping down.
His company is currently immersed in the Zeta
lightweight bicycle battery, which he's trying to
develop for wheelchair users. But apart from
this, his interests are, for the moment, focused
on his immediate habitat. He designed all the
interiors of the apartment in York Central, from
the pale blue floorboards, to the ingenious
fluorescent floor-lighting track (which bounces
light up to and off the white ceilings), and came
up with the minimalist blue / white decor which
runs throughout, even down to the duck-egg and
cream marble chess-set on the kitchen worktop, at
which point witness a classic Clive conversation.
RM: 'This chess set is lovely, Clive.'
Clive: 'Yes, it is rather.'
RM: (slightly overawed) 'I suppose you must be
brilliant at chess. Do you play against
computers?'
Clive: 'No, actually, I don't play at all. I
can play, but I don't. I just bought it because
it matches the colour scheme.'
Once such honesty is established, Clive's
apartment becomes rather good fun. There's the
Bang and Olufsen hi-fi in the kitchen sideboard,
which slides open and glows at you when you wave
your hand at it. There's a spectacular 1978
Steinway grand, which was owned by Clive's
grandfather. ('I don't play, actually, but please
play yourself if you'd like to.' I do, it's
dreamy); there are also some nice big modern
paintings, sculpture and a little gas fire next
to a comfy sofa where you can sample his large
collection of poetry (an art form he clearly is
at home with).
It's enough to make living in King's Cross
seem quite inviting, another of Clive's concerns.
He's already hosted lunch meetings with the local
councillors, a youth leader and P&O, who own
much of the land around Battlebridge Basin; he's
concerned with giving opportunities to people in
his new borough of lslington. 'Do you know what
the unemployment rate here is for young people?
(It's 40 per cent.) That's what Tony Blair should
be concerned with. He lives just up the road, for
God's sake.'
What Clive really fancied before he got into
loft conversions was a Scottish castle. 'I just
couldn't find one. I wanted one which was really
in the country. But the castles I found were all
actually on farm land, so you would just step out
from the castle straight into a farm. Not ideal
when I wanted to step out into a real
wilderness.' What he's ended up with, of course,
is the exact opposite. Throughout the apartment,
the ingenious floor lighting cuts down internal
reflection; the huge curtain-less windows are
full of the constant light and movement from the
city which surrounds them. 'Sometimes I wake up
at three in the morning, like one does. I've been
doing rather a lot of that lately. I go outside,
out onto the terrace. All the lights of the city
are still on. I wait until dawn comes up over
Docklands, and it's amazing.' Rather than hover
above London on his penthouse floor, Clive
Sinclair is immersed in it.
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