New London 2015/2016

New London 2015/2016

1 NEW LONDON 2015/2016 A selection of the best newly completed and upcoming projects in the capital, chosen for their architectural quality and wider contribution to London’s built environment. 02 The selection process 04 Foreword 06 Conservation & Retrofit 20 Education 30 Health & Care 36 Homes 44 Hotels & Hospitality 50 Housing 62 Masterplans & Area Strategies 72 Mixed-Use 82 Office Buildings 90 Office Interiors 96 Public Buildings 104 Public Spaces 112 Retail 118 The Temporary 126 Transport & Infrastructure 132 Sponsors 139 Index This catalogue is published by NLA to coincide with the New London Awards 2015 Contributor: David Taylor Editorial Team: Jenine Hudson, Debbie Whitfield, Molly Nicholson, Jessame Cronin, Sarah Johnson Design: Martin Page © New London Architecture, July 2015 NLA, The Building Centre, 26 Store Street, London WC1E 7BT www.newlondonarchitecture.org @nlalondon #NLAwards2015 1 The selection process The New London Awards were launched also for their impact on surroundings and wider five years ago by New London Architecture contribution to London. (NLA) to celebrate the capital’s best new projects, and is the only London-wide awards This year, as part of NLA’s 10th Anniversary to recognise both recently completed projects celebrations, a new Mayor’s Prize, in association and those on the drawing board, across all with the Mayor of London, has been awarded sectors of the built environment. to the project that best creatively contributes to the capital’s economy. Projects are selected not only as being of the highest architectural and design quality, but © Agnese Sanvito The International Jury Clockwise from top left David J Burney Over 300 submissions were extensively reviewed by a team Professor of Planning and Placemaking, of London-based Expert Assessors, each specialists in their Expert Assessors Pratt Institute School of Architecture, New particular field. They worked collaboratively to ensure the York City projects selected met the necessary criteria and were excellent of Riccardo Marini Senior Consultant, their kind. The shortlist was then presented to our International Gehl Architects, Edinburgh and Jury, who were able to bring an objective viewpoint by drawing Copenhagen on their experiences overseas, providing a fascinating discussion David Taylor Claire Barton Paul Bell Claire Bennie Mark Bruce Clare Devine Kathryn Firth Francesca Gernone Jillian Houghton Editor, New London around the delivery of high-quality, sustainable architecture and Partner, Partner, Former Development Director, Director of Director of Head of Interiors, Programme Manager, Quarterly Haverstock Ryder Architecture Director, Peabody EPR Architecture and the Development/ Fletcher Priest LB Southwark urban environment. Built Environment, Urban Design and Architects Dominique Alba Cabe Masterplanning, Director, Atelier Publica Parisien d’Urbanisme, Paris Debbie Whitfield Director, NLA Peter Murray Chairman, NLA & Member of the Mayor’s Design Advisory Panel Ewan Jones Esther Kurland Rosemarie Rob Partridge Tracey Pollard Mike Stiff Matt Yeoman (Chair) Partner, Director, MacQueen MBE Director, Director, Director, Director, Grimshaw Urban Design Consultant /Lecturer AKT II Bruce Gillingham Stiff + Trevillion BuckleyGrayYeoman Monica von London Pollard Schmalensee CEO/VD, Partner, White, Stockholm 2 NEW LONDON 2015/2016 THE SELECTION PROCESS 3 Foreword by Peter Murray, NLA Chairman Awards play an important role. They provide a pat on the back to those who NEW LONDON AWARDS have delivered excellent projects and they raise the profile of good practitioners NEW LONDONER OF THE YEAR, ZAHA HADID so that they are rewarded with new work. They also promote the benefits of good Zaha Hadid has been selected as Londoner of the Year 2015 for a number of reasons. First, for the architecture and good design, they publicise quality and reassure clients in the quality of her architecture, its innovation and the choices they have made in delivering a project. It sometimes feels discriminatory development of new forms of expression. Second, because she is a forceful icon and role model for to select a single winner from the excellent shortlists of projects but we like to women in architecture. Despite the rhetoric, the think that everyone is a winner in the New London Awards. The shortlist is given architectural profession lags behind others, like medicine and law, in raising the profile and role a rigorous assessment by our panel of experts and then it is up to our international of women. Third, her presence in London has jury to select one project that they believe best fulfills the criteria of the Awards – been central to the concept of London as a global creative hub. As part of the capital’s knowledge and that contributes something special to London. We have a splendid panel, which creative economy, architecture and the construction has remained largely unchanged since the Awards began in 2011. From New York, professions have a key role to play in creating jobs and wealth in the capital. While Zaha’s Aquatics Paris, Stockholm, Copenhagen and Edinburgh, they deliver an objective analysis of Centre was a key icon of the 2012 Olympics, and projects and ensure that schemes presented compare well with overseas standards she won the Stirling Prize for The Evelyn Grace Academy, one feels that she has still to win a defining - resulting in choices that are often different to those of more local juries. This commission on the capital. publication and the exhibition of winning and shortlisted projects ensure that their selection is widely promulgated, to the benefit of London and those that deliver the best of design in the capital. NEW LONDON AWARDS COMMISSIONING EXCELLENCE, NATIONAL THEATRE This year, it was thought pertinent to give a special nod to a client, a first for the New London Awards. The Royal National Theatre is custodian of one the masterpieces of late 20th century architecture and a key London landmark designed by Sir Denys Lasdun. It is a building that has required updating over the years to meet the changing needs of the company and its audiences. The interventions commissioned by the RNT have always been carried out with the utmost respect for the existing building and Lasdun’s approach to architecture and placemaking. Extensions and internal alterations marry effortlessly with the building’s original fabric; even temporary buildings are masterful pieces of architecture while night-time illumination add a sense of real theatre to the South Bank panorama. Like the theatre’s productions, the maintenance and refurbishment of its buildings are carried out to the highest professional standards. 4 NEW LONDON 2015/2016 FOREWORD 5 CONSERVATION & RETROFIT Sponsored by Urban Space Management As London struggles to meet its East put the spotlight firmly on the way growing demand for commercial that creative reuses of existing buildings space, opting to retrofit existing – even those as big and recent as the buildings rather than start afresh is former Media Centre at the London paying dividends. In many cases, it is Olympics – are an important element in simpler and quicker to go down the London’s changing landscape. refurbishment route rather than resort This category included a to new builds, and – with some wide variety of schemes which 23 million square foot of commercial sought to maximise office and other space required over the next five years accommodation through the structural – one trend emerging is for occupiers reordering of both listed and unlisted converting institutional buildings buildings - breathing new life into such as schools. Another factor historic fabric and reinstating former supporting the preponderance of the colour schemes or façades with subtlety, retrofit option is the environmental whilst bringing them into line with one, with 15 per cent of national carbon modern requirements. The unbuilt emissions coming from commercial prize was awarded to Commonwealth buildings alone. These benefits are House, judged to be a neat solution to supported also by many end users – and what had been ‘a disastrous piece of their workforces – appreciating the city for years’, with the jury admiring cachet of period ‘vibe’ that reworking its general aesthetics and the techniques heritage buildings can bring. it will employ to get daylight into the One problem in this field, however, spaces. Generally, judges applauded the has arisen from the backfiring policy way that many of the shortlist created a of permitted development rights, new identity for their schemes, but felt which has led to a large loss of office that the winner – and overall winner of space in central London to residential, this year’s New London Awards – Black particularly in Westminster. Cultural Archives, was clearly ahead for Elsewhere in conservation, English its wider contribution to Brixton. ‘As a Heritage became Historic England, transformation it is quite stunning’, said while high profile projects such as Here Peter Murray. Shepherd’s Bush Pavilion Hotel © Anthony Weller 6 NEW LONDON 2015/2016 CONSERVATION & RETROFIT 7 Black Cultural Archives 1 Windrush Square, Brixton, Lambeth, SW2 NEW LONDON AWARDS Sited at the heart of historic Brixton, the by Lambeth Council to provide a permanent WINNER project has brought Raleigh Hall back from home dedicated to black heritage in Britain. OVERALL WINNER the brink and into active use. The derelict The project has produced creative alteration BUILT Grade II listed building, which had been and extension of the former

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