Office extension with a faceted copper roof by Emrys Architects

A faceted roof made from a shimmering copper-bronze alloy covers this extension by British firm Emrys Architects to a pair of Georgian townhouses in London (+ slideshow).

Great James Street Office extension with a faceted copper roof by Emrys Architects

Emrys Architects was asked by property management firm GMS Estates to modernise and extend its offices, which occupy two former residential properties on Great James Street in Bloomsbury.

Great James Street Office extension with a faceted copper roof by Emrys Architects

The architects installed a new two-storey structure at the rear of the buildings to create additional rooms and improve connections between existing workspaces.

Great James Street by Emrys Architects

“The client wished to break out from the confined spaces of the Georgian terrace to allow easier communication between each other whilst retaining some delineation between departments,” explained the architects.

Great James Street Office extension with a faceted copper roof by Emrys Architects

“Our solution was to retain and enhance the grandeur of the terrace and to introduce an entirely new structure in the tight land-locked space to the rear to create a dramatic transition from old to the new,” they added.

Great James Street Office extension with a faceted copper roof by Emrys Architects

The triangular sections of the metal roof angle up and down to create varying ceiling heights inside the new structure, lining up with different parts of the old brick buildings.

Great James Street Office extension with a faceted copper roof by Emrys Architects

“We took the existing heights of key points around the perimeter and used this for inspiration for an unusual triangulated roof form,” said the architects.

Great James Street Office extension with a faceted copper roof by Emrys Architects

Inside, recessed lighting highlights the edges of each plane, while triangular skylights bring daylight into the space from the corners.

Great James Street Office extension with a faceted copper roof by Emrys Architects

A cantilevered wooden staircase leads down to the lower level, where wooden ceiling joists have been left exposed.

Great James Street Office extension with a faceted copper roof by Emrys Architects

A meeting room is contained at the centre of this floor and occupies an old barrel-vaulted brick structure that was formerly used as a vault.

Great James Street Office extension with a faceted copper roof by Emrys Architects

Glass doors help to bring in extra daylight and lead out to small courtyards, plus both levels feature oak parquet flooring.

Great James Street Office extension with a faceted copper roof by Emrys Architects

Photography is by Alan Williams.

Here’s a project description from Emrys Architects:


Great James Street

Two Grade II* listed Georgian properties that have been the head offices of GMS Estates for generations have been redeveloped for the 21st Century. A melee of unconnected post-war extensions and dank lower ground spaces has been replaced with two storeys of striking contemporary work space.

Great James Street Office extension with a faceted copper roof by Emrys Architects

Background

32-33 Great James Street comprises two five storey terraced townhouses built between 1720 and 1724. The terrace is one of the few remaining intact Georgian streets in London, close to Grays Inn in Bloomsbury. The properties suffered bomb and fire damage during the Second World War and were patched-up shortly after with a series of rear extensions. This annex contained poor office accommodation and some areas were in such bad condition that they were only suitable for storage.

Great James Street Office extension with a faceted copper roof by Emrys Architects

GMS Estates are landowners and landlords who own many properties in Central London and take pride in keeping them to a high standard. Having recently completed several refurbishments of residences and offices for the rental market, they realised that their own accommodation was hampering their productivity and staff well-being.

Great James Street Office extension with a faceted copper roof by Emrys Architects

The boardroom at 32 Great James Street was spectacular with original oak panelling and portraits of previous company chairmen, accessed from an oak panelled staircase. However, other areas of the building were jammed with staff in various rooms on different levels. Internal communication involved moving up and down the stairs, opening fire doors and bumping into tired office furniture and trailing wires. The team felt disconnected from each other. Many rooms lacked adequate natural light and felt oppressive. Some of the post-war extensions were damp and warren-like. Furthermore, the organisation was growing and could not easily be contained within the existing structure.

Great James Street Office extension with a faceted copper roof by Emrys Architects

The GMS brief to Emrys Architects was to identify ways of better utilising the property within the constraints of the existing listed buildings and their outbuildings. They required Great James Street to be a flagship headquarters and although steeped in tradition, GMS happily embrace contemporary architecture.

Great James Street Office extension with a faceted copper roof by Emrys Architects

Interiors

The client wished to break out from the confined spaces of the Georgian terrace to allow easier communication between each other whilst retaining some delineation between departments.

Our solution was to retain and enhance the grandeur of the listed terrace and to introduce an entirely new structure in the tight land-locked space to the rear to create a dramatic transition from old to the new.

Following an audit of the existing outbuildings, it was agreed with the local authority to retain some elements. The most notable feature was the existing silver vault, a brick barrel-arched structure that included a heavy steel door. Whilst this was not ideally located, it was used as the starting point for the space plan of the lower floors and became an unconventional meeting room.

Great James Street Office extension with a faceted copper roof by Emrys Architects
Lower ground floor plan – click for larger image

The new structure is on two levels and is accessible from the Georgian terrace at both lower ground and ground floors.

The work spaces have been configured to allow departments to occupy clearly demised areas, yet still allow full connectivity between groups. Departments are positioned in areas that have the best natural light and access to the external courtyards. There are no physical divisions between each place.

An asymmetric lofted ceiling sits under the new roof with recessed lighting accentuating the geometric planes. A double height void is cut out at the rear and a cantilevered timber staircase rises through to connect the floors. Use of roof lights and glazed access to courtyard areas has ensured that the building is flooded with light.

Chevron oak parquet floor runs throughout the new offices and timber joists on the lower floor have been left exposed and lime washed.

Great James Street Office extension with a faceted copper roof by Emrys Architects
Upper ground floor plan – click for larger image

Roof Design

Faced with the restriction of the land-locked site, we took the existing heights of key points around the perimeter to the rear of the listed building and used this for inspiration for an unusual triangulated roof form.

In order to maximise the potential of the space and introduce drama, certain elements of the roof shape were pulled upward increasing the internal floor-to-ceiling heights. The contemporary folded roof form is complemented by the use of a copper bronze alloy in a flush rain screen arrangement, the patina selected to harmonise with the existing townhouse.

The walls adjacent to the light wells are fully glazed and additional windows and roof lights added to maximise light penetration into the plan.

Great James Street Office extension with a faceted copper roof by Emrys Architects
First floor and roof plan – click for larger image

Structural Design

The structure is made up of a series of folded triangular plates that are self-supporting when all panels are in place. These are retained by a continuous light-weight steel ring beam that ties all the panels together and prevents them from sliding away. Triangular roof lights are placed outside this ring beam and allow light to penetrate down to the lower ground floor.

Great James Street Office extension with a faceted copper roof by Emrys Architects
Long section

Outcome

“Emrys Architects have taken unusable areas and created stunning new offices that have transformed our working day.” – Tom Gibbon, Managing Director, GMS Estates

Great James Street Office extension with a faceted copper roof by Emrys Architects
Cross section

Architects: Emrys Architects
Location: Bloomsbury, London WC1
Type Of Project: Refurbishment and Extension
Structural Engineers: Elliott Wood Partnership
Project Architect: Gwilym Jones
Design Team: Glyn Emrys, Matt Blackden, Nuno Meira, Gwilym Jones
Client: GMS Estates
Funding: Private
Tender date: December 2012
Start on site date: 4th March 2013
Contract duration: 36 Weeks
Gross internal floor area: 440sqm – 4,734sqft
Form of contract and/or procurement: Traditional /JCT Standard Form of Building Contract
Total cost: £1m

The post Office extension with a faceted copper roof
by Emrys Architects
appeared first on Dezeen.

Creating New Year’s Resolutions for 2014

After Christmas each year, the search function on our website gets a lot of activity by people looking for articles on “how to get organized” and “be more organized.” This is of little surprise since “Get Organized!” is such a common New Year’s Resolution.

Over the next couple weeks, we are going to address New Year’s Resolutions in a series of posts — how to create them, how to make a plan for achieving them, technology that can help you work on them, and even an alternative perspective on how not to make them. We want to help the thousands of people looking to get rid of clutter and find more organization in the new year, just as we do every day, but also lend a helping hand to those of you creating resolutions that have nothing at all to do with clutter and disorganization.

Brainstorm

Grab a pen and paper, find a quiet and comfortable place to sit, close your eyes, and take a deep breath. Spend a few minutes in solitude trying your best to think about nothing. If you’re like most people (myself included) it will be very difficult to clear your mind, especially if this is not an activity you do regularly. Responsibilities, concerns, wishes, dreams, embarrassing situations, and maybe a few random jokes will flood your mind. As they do, write down these thoughts on your paper and then quickly return to trying to clear your mind. Eventually, you’ll either tire of the activity or be successful at having a clear mind, and this is when you can stop the meditation activity and review the list you created.

Do you notice any themes among the items on your list? Do you see items that evoke strong feelings — good or bad? Are there items on your list of things you wish to change or improve upon or achieve?

While reviewing this list, think about how you want to feel in 2014. Like most people, you probably wish to have more energy, more happiness, and less stress. Are there any items on your list that will help you achieve these feelings of contentment?

Work through your notes and begin to draft your resolutions for the new year.

Be precise

After brainstorming, “Get Organized!” may still be at the forefront of your resolutions. Unfortunately, it is an extremely vague resolution, and people who make vague resolutions are more likely to fail at achieving them than people who make precise resolutions.

Do you want to get organized at work or at home? Is there a specific area of your life where, if you were more organized, you would have less stress? Do you have one or two projects that are out of control and a little organizing can help them succeed?

The more exact you are with what you want to change, the more likely you will be to create steps to help you achieve your resolutions. Instead of “Get Organized!” perhaps you want to create precise resolutions like: Better organize the children’s bedtime routine; Organize and file medical records and bills; Unclutter clothes that don’t fit from bedroom closet; Research, acquire, learn how to use, and maintain a new project management system at work.

Be realistic

There are a number of things I would like to change about myself, but I am not super human. I have limitations — limited time, energy, finances, etc. As a result, I’ve never been successful at achieving more than 12 resolutions (one per month) in a given year. And, most years, I’ve only been able to achieve four or five large resolutions. You know yourself best, so be realistic with what you can achieve. If you have a newborn at home, you may only want to have two or three resolutions for 2014. If “Get the proper amount of sleep each night by going to bed by 10:00 pm” is one of your resolutions, as it is one of mine, put it at the top of your list. The more energy you have, the more likely you’ll be to achieve the other resolutions on your list.

Further reading

When creating New Year’s Resolutions, I always think about the brilliant and inspiring Danielle LaPorte. Her book The Desire Map is one of the best books I’ve encountered for helping to decide what new path or paths you wish to take in life.

Let Unclutterer help you get your home or office organized. Subscribe to our helpful product shipments from Quarterly today.

Google Zeitgeist 2013

Google a dévoilé, comme il est désormais coutume chaque année, les termes les plus recherchés en une jolie vidéo appelée Google Zeitgeist. Une création permettant de revivre l’année 2013 passée en moins de deux minutes. L’ensemble est à découvrir en images et en vidéo dans la suite de l’article.

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Design Microsoft’s Surface Into the Classroom Experience

Content sponsored by Surface

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Last month, we announced the Surface Classroom Design Challenge (where our own Allan Chochinov will a part of the judging panel). If you haven’t already, make sure to enter the contest before January 24th, 2014. Let’s take a look at the way Surface has been changing the classroom environment with a few thoughts from teachers and students:

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Motorola – Color Changing Print Ad

Une excellente initiative de l’agence Digitas pour le constructeur téléphonique Motorola avec cette campagne innovante autour des couleurs. Une opération et une publicité interactive disponible dans plus de 150 000 numéros de l’édition de Janvier 2014 de Wired Magazine. Plus de détails dans la suite de l’article.

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Best of CH 2013: Link About It: From Nelson Mandela to Google Glass, David Bowie to Yayoi Kusama—a look at this year’s top headlines

Best of CH 2013: Link About It


As 2013 comes to a close, we take a moment to reflect upon the hundreds of headlines that came across our desks throughout the year, which we reported on in our weekly feature, Link About It. Below are 20 articles that not only made the news, but serve as…

Continue Reading…

Star-shaped clothes horse by Aaron Dunkerton

Graduate designer Aaron Dunkerton has developed an expandable clothing airer that unfolds into a star shape to create more space for hanging wet garments (+ slideshow).

Star-shaped clothes horse by Aaron Dunkerton

Aaron Dunkerton‘s Clothes Horse has 36 arms, 10 more than a conventional airer, and when in use it takes the form of a 12-pointed star.

Star-shaped clothes horse by Aaron Dunkerton

“The shape of my clothes horse when erect allows for good air circulation around the clothes, which will help them to dry faster,” said the designer.

Star-shaped clothes horse by Aaron Dunkerton

The piece is made from narrow strips of beach plywood, connected by brushed aluminium rods. Small openings create hooks that allow the structure to be locked into position, or collapsed when not it use.

Star-shaped clothes horse by Aaron Dunkerton

“When it’s collapsed it is a lot smaller than conventional airers, but when expanded it has more drying arms, as well as having a more interesting form,” Dunkerton told Dezeen.

Star-shaped clothes horse by Aaron Dunkerton

Dunkerton designed the Clothes Horse as part of a product and furniture design degree at Kingston University. His other projects include a cavity brick fitting that allows endangered birds to nest in new buildings and garden walls.

Star-shaped clothes horse by Aaron Dunkerton

Here’s a project description from the designer:


Clothes Horse

The dimensions of my clothes horse are 56cm long, 32 wide and 23cm high when it is collapsed so it is much easier to store than a conventional clothes airer which are normally awkward sizes and hard to hide when not in use. When in use its dimensions are 56cm deep, 112cm wide and 112cm tall. The shape of my clothes horse when erect allows for good air circulation around the clothes, which will help them to dry faster.

The design comprises a locking arm which keeps the clothes horse in it collapsed form so that when it is being moved and stored between uses it is easier to carry.

Star-shaped clothes horse by Aaron Dunkerton

Whilst my design does have a bigger footprint when it is being used, it is much more interesting to look at than normal airers.

It has 36 drying arms which is around 10 more than normal airers. It is made from brushed aluminium rod and beach plywood. The wood is cut using a CNC router. The aluminium rod is threaded at the end and then fastened with domed nuts and washers.

The post Star-shaped clothes horse
by Aaron Dunkerton
appeared first on Dezeen.

Core77 2013 Year in Review: Digital Fabrication, Part 1 – New Machines for Consumers

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Unsurprisingly, 2013 was a big year for digital fabrication, as the technology continues to trickle down into the affordable consumer category. So before we even get into what designers have done with the new technologies available to us, let’s take a look at what the companies responsible for those technologies have gifted us with this year.

ShopBot Tools Handibot

The runaway Kickstarter digital fabrication success of the year was the HandiBot. North-Carolina-based ShopBot Tools’ unusual concept—a portable CNC mill whose man-handle-ability gives it an infinite work area footprint–was a smashing success, hitting and more than doubling its funding target within days of going live (the first 150 units have since been delivered). “We really love the idea of a highly portable and affordable little CNC,” says ShopBot founder Ted Hall. “The fact that you ‘take the tool to the material’ creates all sorts of new options for CNC… but the real aspiration for Handibot is to break the ease-of-use barrier for CNC-style, subtractive, digital fabrication.” To that end, Hall and team are working on creating an app environment for the Handibot; in the company’s vision of the Handibot’s future, users will download apps for specific operations they want to perform, call them up on a paired smartphone, tablet or computer, then “click ‘Start’ and have the tool get to work right in front of you.”

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Inventables Shapeoko 2

On the open-source front, Inventables launched their Shapeoko 2 CNC mill, a small-footprint (12×12×2.5) desktop machine going for $650–685 depending on configuration. Some five years in the making, the Shapeoko 2 can also be ordered in a $300 kit form for those tinkerers willing to supply the electronics, belts, pulleys, etc. and assemble it themselves.

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MATAERIAL Anti-Gravity Object Modeling 3D Printer

If there’s a 3D-printing version of the Handibot—which is to say, a machine independent of a build platform—it’s the MATAERIAL Anti-Gravity Object Modeling 3D Printer. The machine’s articulating, robotic arm extrudes material in 3D space, rather than depositing it layer-by-layer, and the thing is so radical we expect it will take a little time for designers’ imagination can catch up to what the machine is capable of.

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Kevin Corrado Photography

Voici une sélection de différents clichés du photographe Kevin Corrado. Avec notamment la série Transfer, proposant de montrer un bras dont la main est couverte d’une peinture en adéquation avec le fond, l’artiste nous offre des images d’une grande beauté, à découvrir dans la suite de l’article.

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Best of Watch Concepts in 2013

It was the year of the iWatch and then some! Three innovative approaches to the fabled watch from the house of Apple; with similar yet distinct visions the designers wow-ed us with their approach. Here is a quick recap of the watch concepts that you loved and wished adorned your wrist…or finger! Take a look…

Ring Clock by Szikszai Gusztáv

Apple iWatch Concept by James Ivaldi

Limbo – Transformable Flexible Display Smartphone by Jeabyun Yeon

Clockwork Apple – Concept iWatch by Tolga Tuncer

iWatch Design Concept by Esben Oxholm

Nooka ZIG Concept Watch by Adrian Candela

Ghost – Watch by Simone Savini

LifeHub – Watch, Smartphone, Headset, Key, Wallet, Bluetooth Speaker and Projector Device by Lucid Design

Wrist-Borne Device by Zissou

Hoop Concept Watch by Simone Savini for NOTdesignstudio


Yanko Design
Timeless Designs – Explore wonderful concepts from around the world!
Shop CKIE – We are more than just concepts. See what’s hot at the CKIE store by Yanko Design!
(Best of Watch Concepts in 2013 was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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