| History -
introduction
From the very beginning of public service broadcasting by
the British Broadcasting Company in 1922, BBC engineers have
been at the forefront of broadcasting developments. When
Captain P.P. Eckersley was appointed the Company's first
Chief Engineer in 1923, the need for specialists in research
and development became obvious, and so at the end of the
year Captain A.G.D. West, who had worked with Rutherford
at the Cavendish Laboratory was appointed Assistant Chief
Engineer (Development). Then in February 1924, when H.L.
Kirke became senior Development Engineer, West was made Assistant
Chief Engineer (Research) - the BBC's first research engineer.
When the British Broadcasting Company became the British
Broadcasting Corporation in 1927, the Research and Development
Sections moved from their cramped quarters at Savoy Hill
to Avenue House, Clapham, in south London. The Research
Section stopped functioning in 1929 when all its staff
left, and the following year the remaining Development
Section was named Research Department. Kirke was appointed
Senior Research Engineer and he kept this position, later
known as Head of Research Department, until 1950.
Designs Department was set up in 1947 to give impetus
to the re-equipping of Radio and the re-opening of the
television service after the war.
In the following thirty years there were very few developments
in broadcasting engineering in which the Department did
not have a hand. From the conversion of the 405-line service
to 625 lines, the launch of colour, flim and video tape
recording, telecine and caption generation, transmission
of television by radio links, transatlantic cable and satellite,
teletext and the BBC Microcomuputer, Designs Department
had a hand in them all.
In 1988 Designs Department merged with
Equipment Department to form Designs & Equipment
Department at Avenue House, Chiswick. This later slimmed
to Design Group as
the manufacturing
process was
outsourced.
Over the years a whole Engineering Division
has evolved and metamorphosed. BBC Research & Development is the
product of merging two deparments: Design Group and Research
in 1993. BBC R&D provides the main strategy inputs
for the BBC. This is balanced by the BBC's Technology Direction
Group who are responsible for the adoption of standards
and approval of technical investment.
Research

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Research Department was formed
in April 1930. It appears to have been based
in Avenue House,
Clapham under H.L. Kirke, moving to 74 Nightingale
Lane Balham in 1932, and to Nightingale Square,
Balham in 1936. Many of the staff of RD were
evacuated to Bagley Croft during the war years.
In 1949, RD moved to Kingswood Warren.
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Designs

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Designs Department was first established in
Brock House in 1947. The department moved to
Western House in 1958. In 1985, the BBC decided
to amalgamate Designs and Equipment Departments
at Avenue House in Chiswick, a move that was
completed in 1988.
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In 1993,
Research Department and Design Group merged
to create BBC R&D.
This Department was originally part of BBC
Resources, but was transferred to Policy and
Planning in
recogntion of its strategic value in 1996,
and now sits in the New Media and Technology
Directorate. |
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