Brighton College by Allies and Morrison

Architects Allies and Morrison have added this gabled extension to a nineteenth century boarding school in Brighton, England.

Brighton College by Allies and Morrison

The three-storey addition nestles against the brick and stone walls of the listed boarding house at ground floor level, but steps away with its upper storeys so that it barely touches, as requested by the planning authorities.

Brighton College by Allies and Morrison

Terracotta batons clad the building’s facade, creating vertical stripes above the band of glazing that surrounds the ground floor.

Brighton College by Allies and Morrison

The main entrance to the building is on the middle storey, while the lowest floor sits level with a sunken quadrangle to one side.

Brighton College by Allies and Morrison

A double-height cafe on the ground floor opens out to this courtyard, while a top-lit staircase leads to classrooms, offices and a health centre on the upper floors.

Brighton College by Allies and Morrison

Other schools we’ve featured include one shaped like a crocodile and one with a shiny copper chapel inside.

Brighton College by Allies and Morrison

See more stories about schools »

Brighton College by Allies and Morrison

Photography is by Robin Hayes.

Brighton College by Allies and Morrison

Here’s some extra information from Allies and Morrison:


This project provides academic and social facilities for staff and students at Brighton College, one of the most successful co-educational independent schools in England.

Brighton College by Allies and Morrison

The simple linear building adjoins a listed nineteenth century boarding house to form the edge of a new courtyard, the Woolton Quad. Its double-height cafe/ entrance space negotiates the storey height between the new court and the school’s principal quadrangle, to which it is linked externally by amphitheatre-like steps.

Brighton College by Allies and Morrison

A dramatic roof-lit stair and circulation space links the gabled 3-storey building with its neo-gothic neighbour, providing access to new classrooms, offices and a new school health centre.

Brighton College by Allies and Morrison

Axonometric – click above for larger image

Client’s brief

To provide an exemplary building to improve boarding and staff facilities fit for the 21st century.

Brighton College by Allies and Morrison

Exploded axonometric – click above for larger image

Accommodation

A students cafe, a small new school health centre, 4 new staff offices, a staff senior common room and workspace area, a boardroom, staff changing and shower facilities.

Brighton College by Allies and Morrison

Site plan – click above for larger image

Planning constraints

The site lies within a conservation area, as well as directly adjoining the Grade II Listed C19th Abraham boarding house. The way in which the new building meets the existing building was the most contentious part of the scheme.

Brighton College by Allies and Morrison

Lower ground floor plan – click above for larger image

To address this, the building sets back from the Listed Building on the upper 2 storeys. When it does touch, it does so as lightly as possible. A linear glazed roof light, for example, sits delicately between the new and old structures along the circulation spine.

Brighton College by Allies and Morrison

Cross section – click above for larger image

Materials and method of construction

» Steel frame with structural timber panel floor decks.
» External walls are a rain-screen facade system on a steel stud backing wall, with a vertical terracotta ‘baguette’ outer screen.

Brighton College by Allies and Morrison

North Elevation – click above for larger image

Summary of time-table

May 2009: Project start
October 2009: Planning application submission
April 2010: Tender
July 2010: Construction start on site
December 2011: Practical completion

Brighton College by Allies and Morrison

West courtyard elevation – click above for larger image

Programme and budget constraints

Meeting the client’s expectations for high quality and value for money, within the constraints outlined above, meant that careful attention was paid to all aspects of the design throughout the project

Brighton College by Allies and Morrison

South elevation – click above for larger image

The start on site date, which was set by the client, was chosen to ensure that disruptive demolition and groundworks could be carried out during the school summer vacation 2010. This date and programme were achieved.

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New Court, Rothschild Bank headquarters by OMA with Allies and Morrison

The OMA-designed headquarters for the Rothschild Bank in London is one of the six buildings shortlisted for the 2012 Stirling Prize (+ slideshow).

Rothschild Bank by OMA with Allies and Morrison

Completed at the end of 2011, the steel and glass building features ten floors of open-plan offices, a rooftop garden and a glazed “sky pavilion” containing a stack of three double-height events rooms.

Rothschild Bank by OMA with Allies and Morrison

Above: photograph is by Charlie Koolhaas

This glazed cube is raised up above the roof and it towers above surrounding buildings that include the James Stirling-designed Number One Poultry and the St. Stephen Walbrook church by Christopher Wren.

Rothschild Bank by OMA with Allies and Morrison

Above: photograph is by Charlie Koolhaas

At ground level the facade is recessed, increasing the width of the pavement along St Swithin’s Lane, and is split into two halves that frame a view through to the church and graveyard behind.

Rothschild Bank by OMA with Allies and Morrison

Three smaller annex blocks adjoin the main building, providing meeting rooms, staircases and lifts, plus a staff cafe and gym.

Rothschild Bank by OMA with Allies and Morrison

This is the fourth headquarters building that the Rothschild family have occupied on the site since 1809 and it was delivered in collaboration with UK architects Allies and Morrison.

Rothschild Bank by OMA with Allies and Morrison

OMA have also been nominated for the Stirling Prize with their Maggie’s Centre, Gartnavel in Glasgow. See all the nominations here »

Rothschild Bank by OMA with Allies and Morrison

See more projects by OMA, including a series of interviews we filmed with Rem Koolhaas »

Rothschild Bank by OMA with Allies and Morrison

Photography is by Philippe Ruault, apart from where otherwise stated.

Rothschild Bank by OMA with Allies and Morrison

Above: photograph is by Charlie Koolhaas

Here’s some more text from OMA:


Rothschild Headquarters, New Court, London, UK

Rothschild has been located at New Court since N.M. Rothschild established residence there in 1809. New Court is situated on the architecturally rich site of St. Swithin’s Lane, a narrow medieval alley in the heart of the City of London, and is adjacent to Christopher Wren’s historically significant St. Stephen Walbrook church.

The new New Court is the fourth iteration of Rothschild’s London headquarters on the site, each increasingly isolating the church of St. Stephen Walbrook. What began as a dialogue between two open spaces in the city – a courtyard and a churchyard – has, through three centuries of transformation, been reduced to an accidental proximity.

Rothschild Bank by OMA with Allies and Morrison

OMA’s design of New Court, lead by Partners-in-charge Ellen van Loon and Rem Koolhaas, reinstates a visual connection between St. Swithin’s Lane and St. Stephen Walbrook. Instead of competing as accidental neighbours, the church and New Court now form a twinned urban ensemble, an affinity reinforced by the proportional similarity of their towers.

New Court is comprised of a simple extrusion transformed through a series of volumetric permutations into a hybrid of cube and annexes: a ‘cube’ of open office space and appendices of shared spaces and private work areas.

Rothschild Bank by OMA with Allies and Morrison

The central cube of the building consists of ten efficient and flexible open-plan office floors, which facilitate views over St. Stephen and the surrounding City. This cube is surrounded by four adjoining volumes – annexes – with support facilities to the Bank’s operations such as meeting rooms, vertical circulation, reception areas, and a staff cafe and gym. The fourth annexe, a Sky Pavilion, sits at the top of this central cube. The Sky Pavilion is an open space largely free of vertical elements. This affords a clear view of Wren’s most famous London Church, St. Paul’s Cathedral, and the rest of the City, and provides an appropriately unique space for high level functions.

Rothschild Bank by OMA with Allies and Morrison

Above: photograph is by Charlie Koolhaas

At street level, the entire cube is lifted to create generous pedestrian access to the tall glass lobby and a covered forecourt that opens a visual passage to St. Stephen Walbrook and its churchyard – creating a surprising moment of transparency in the otherwise constrained opacity of the medieval streetscape. Reconnected, the two establish a continuity that radically transforms St. Swithin’s Lane and the setting of the Church.

Rothschild Bank by OMA with Allies and Morrison

Project: Rothschild’s London Headquarters
Status: Competition 2005, Completed November 2011
Client: Rothschild
Location: St Swithin’s Lane, City of London
Budget: N/A
Site: New Court, enclosed in cluster of buildings, adjacent to the 17th century St. Stephen Walbrook church; with main entrance on the narrow St. Swithin’s Lane
Program: Office headquarters: 21,000m2 (GFA)

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by OMA with Allies and Morrison
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