The Concrete Elephant
| The Concrete Elephant | |
|---|---|
| Trollope & Colls White Elephant | |
| Artist | Barbara Jones | 
| Year | 1963 | 
| Type | Sculpture | 
| Medium | Concrete | 
| Subject | Elephants, Piping | 
| Location | Camberley, United Kingdom | 
| 51°19′59″N 0°46′16″W / 51.33305°N 0.77101°W | |
The Concrete Elephant is a sculpture and local landmark standing along the A30 in Camberley on approach to The Meadows roundabout.
It was created by Barbara Jones for Trollope & Colls for the Lord Mayor's Show held on the 19 November 1963, carried on a yellow low loader with a pink and grey cab behind a person dressed as a zebra carrying a zebra crossing pole and light and a red post office telephone box. It was to represent their pioneering use of reinforced concrete in pipework.
The piece was installed in its current location in 1964, when Trollope & Colls gained permission to sit the elephant at the entrance to their yard off the A30 London Road. Over the years the sculpture has faced a number of damages, in 1982 part of the trunk fell off, in 1993 the ears were stolen, and in November 1987, it was painted over with large black spots.