Cambridge bakery converted into family home by NRAP Architects

British architect Richard Overs has converted a deserted bakery in Cambridge, England, into a modern home for his family (+ slideshow).

From Bake-House to Our House by NRAP Architects

Overs, a director at NRAP Architects, renovated both the bakery and a small accompanying house to create the two-storey residence called The Nook, then tied the two buildings together by adding a black-painted timber structure in between.

From Bake-House to Our House by NRAP Architects

The architect said the two separate structures lent themselves perfectly to the arrangement of a home: “The large space within the bakery provides flexible living space, whilst the smaller rooms within the baker’s house are ideally suited to bedrooms.”

From Bake-House to Our House by NRAP Architects

Accessed via a private lane, the house’s facade is a wall made from a combination of light and dark bricks. An entrance leads through the wall into the new wooden structure, which contains a lobby and staircase.

From Bake-House to Our House by NRAP Architects

The hallway leads through to the large room formerly used as bakery. With high ceilings and white-painted wooden trusses, the space creates a flexible living, dining and kitchen space.

From Bake-House to Our House by NRAP Architects

A wall of glazing opens the kitchen out to a secluded courtyard located behind the facade, while a series of glass doors also lead out to a second courtyard at the rear.

From Bake-House to Our House by NRAP Architects

Skylights bring additional daylight into the living space, while floors are covered with painted plywood boards. The kitchen worktops are salvaged from the architect’s previous kitchen.

From Bake-House to Our House by NRAP Architects

“Our attitude to the fabric of the building was quite relaxed; elements of value were retained, others were removed,” explained Overs.

From Bake-House to Our House by NRAP Architects

The hallway features a wall of exposed clay bricks, revealing the former facade of the small detached house, which contains a pair of bedrooms on each floor.

From Bake-House to Our House by NRAP Architects

Here’s a project description from architect Richard Owers:


From Bakehouse to our House

Richard Owers, director of NRAP Architects, describes the process of converting a disused bakery in Cambridge into a home for his family.

From Bake-House to Our House by NRAP Architects

 

The Nook …….. is where the hearth is!

“Converting The Nook was an important moment in my architectural career, the significance of which was increased by the death of my father the previous year. He had inspired me at a very early age to become an architect and throughout my career suggested it was important to live in ones own creation. Finally firing up the hearth at The Nook was therefore rather poignant.”

From Bake-House to Our House by NRAP Architects

Rescue Operation

“An often overlooked challenge for architects interested in sustainability is how to adapt existing buildings in a creative and cost effective manner. This project demonstrates how a building with little apparent architectural value can be rescued through good design. It also illustrates that demanding physical and budgetary constraints require creative solutions, and that calculated risk-taking can overcome the difficulties of a cautious mortgage market.”

From Bake-House to Our House by NRAP Architects

Dereliction

In October 2010 Richard Owers of NRAP Architects spotted a ramshackle bakery and detached house in south Cambridge. The bakery, more recently used as a launderette, was disused and boarded up. The baker’s house had been privately rented and was in very poor condition. The two buildings were stranded behind a parade of shops, within a sea of car parking, at the end of a tarmac drive. As a place to live it had little going for it – or that was the general perception.

From Bake-House to Our House by NRAP Architects

The existing two-up-two-down house was entered off a forecourt, directly into a central room that doubled as entrance hall and dining room. A living room and kitchen were accessed off opposing corners of the dining room. The same pattern was repeated at first floor, with entry to the bathroom via a bedroom.

From Bake-House to Our House by NRAP Architects

The Solution

A walled garden in front of the bakery provides privacy to the living spaces and definition to the forecourt. A black-stained, timber-clad structure was added to the house to link it to the bakery and provide a new entrance hall and staircase. The existing staircase was removed to provide storage space in bedrooms. A right of way, passing along the north edge of the bakery, presented a privacy and security problem that was overcome by blocking-up all but one of the existing openings on the north façade. In the remaining opening translucent glass replaces a timber door. Large windows in the south facade were introduced to re-orientate the living spaces to the back garden.

From Bake-House to Our House by NRAP Architects

Expanding Space

In a tight urban context the balance between privacy, light, and views is hard won. An increased sense of space, achieved through large openings with strong connections to the outside, is often at odds with privacy requirements. The following images show how this was achieved.

From Bake-House to Our House by NRAP Architects
Image showing the original bakery and detached house

Inside Outside

The walled garden has the feeling of a living room, carpeted in white pebbles with a planted edge and a Tibetan Cherry tree for shade. A large sliding-folding door allows the living spaces to extend into the garden, and the garden to extend into the living space.

Ground floor plan of From Bake-House to Our House by NRAP Architects
Ground floor plan – click for larger image

Controlled Views

Views through the building and of external spaces are carefully controlled. The walled garden is first glimpsed from the front doormat and again at the foot of the staircase. It is not until one enters the living space that uninterrupted views of both front and back gardens are possible. Natural light plays on the different materials and surfaces to create an ethereal atmosphere that changes throughout the day and with the seasons.

First floor plan of From Bake-House to Our House by NRAP Architects
First floor plan – click for larger image

Top Lighting

The space within the entrance hall expands vertically up to the first floor as you penetrate the building. A roof light above brings natural light into the heart of the space.

Roof plan of From Bake-House to Our House by NRAP Architects
Roof plan – click for larger image

Open-plan Living

A compelling architectural diagram for contemporary living combines a compact arrangement of bedrooms with open-plan living spaces. The contrasting form and geometries of the two existing buildings lent itself perfectly to this arrangement. The large space within the bakery provides flexible living space, divided by free-standing storage and island units, whilst the smaller rooms within the baker’s house are ideally suited to bedrooms.

Section through garden of From Bake-House to Our House by NRAP Architects
Cross section – click for larger image

Special Places

The staircase is an exciting place to stop. In recognition of this we created an extended landing at the top, overlooking the entrance hall. The landing is large enough for a writing desk and chair.

Section through courtyard of From Bake-House to Our House by NRAP Architects
Long section – click for larger image

Re-use, Recycle, Reclaim

Rescuing a dilapidated building is an intrinsically sustainable thing to do. Our attitude to the fabric of the building was quite relaxed; elements of value were retained, others were removed. The lintel over the original front door for example was reused above the fire place as a focus to the living space.

Brickwork to the original external wall of the house is exposed in the hallway, in contrast with the smooth plaster used elsewhere. Painted plywood, usually used as a sub-floor, has been laid directly on rigid insulation over the original concrete floor. Low energy florescent lights are discretely hidden behind a timber pelmet, and kitchen worktops and units were salvaged from my previous kitchen.

North elevation of From Bake-House to Our House by NRAP Architects
North elevation – click for larger image

Process

As soon as our offer on the property was accepted I commenced the design to enable a planning application to be lodged immediately after ‘exchange’ of contracts. A period of six weeks between exchange and completion was agreed, to parallel the statutory planning period and allow just enough time to prepare construction information. Unfortunately the council took three weeks to merely validate the application, so construction was commenced, at some risk, prior to receiving planning permission. The pressure of paying two mortgages made it essential to compress the construction program. A contract was negotiated with a local builder prepared to wait until we had re-mortgaged to get the majority of his money. Construction was completed in three months and the property re-mortgaged immediately after.

East elevation of From Bake-House to Our House by NRAP Architects
East elevation – click for larger image

The post Cambridge bakery converted into
family home by NRAP Architects
appeared first on Dezeen.

Ecological urban spa made from shipping containers planned for San Francisco

News: wellness entrepreneur Nell Waters is attempting to raise £146,000 on crowdfunding website Kickstarter to build a prototypal ecological urban bathhouse from shipping containers in San Francisco.

SOAK Urban bathhouse project San Francisco by Nell Waters and Rebar

Waters wants to create an “urban bathhouse for healthy hedonists” that could pop up on any available lot in the city and operate autonomously from the municipal power and water supplies.

SOAK Urban bathhouse project San Francisco by Nell Waters and Rebar

The design of the SOAK spa was developed by San Francisco design studio Rebar, and consists of stacked containers arranged around a courtyard that house changing rooms, toilets, a lounge, a sauna, hot tubs and a roof deck.

SOAK Urban bathhouse project San Francisco by Nell Waters and Rebar
Diagram showing water irrigation

“This container-spa joins the wave of tactical urbanism currently happening in San Francisco and other cargotecture projects that have created a local zeitgeist around the recognisably corrugated exterior,” said the project team in a statement. “No city is better positioned to launch this first iteration of the mobile, pop-up spa.”

SOAK Urban bathhouse project San Francisco by Nell Waters and Rebar
Diagram showing solar energy needed to heat water

A small garden next to the entrance would lead to an internal courtyard housing the reception, enclosed showers and two cold plunge buckets. Stairs would provide access to the roof lounge and an additional hot tub.

SOAK Urban bathhouse project San Francisco by Nell Waters and Rebar
Diagram showing water irrigation and solar energy needed

Rainwater would provide half of the spa’s water, while greywater would be filtered through plants and particle filers and used to irrigate a garden on the rear patio. All of the water used would be heated by solar hot water heaters and photovoltaic panels on the roof.

“The challenge that we set out in developing this proof of concept prototype is to use absolutely the least amount of water possible, use the least amount of energy possible – we try to catch as much as we can from the sky,” explained Blaine Merker from Rebar in a video on the project’s Kickstarter page.

SOAK Urban bathhouse project San Francisco by Nell Waters and Rebar
Diagrams showing programme layout – click for larger image

The project team has engaged engineers to analyse the spa’s energy performance and, if it achieves its funding target by 1 January 2014, will work on refining the structural criteria of the containers and assessing water usage with the aim of realising a two-container prototype sometime in 2014.

More details from the project’s co-ordinators follows:


Soak – an urban bathhouse for healthy hedonists

Designed to be modular and self-contained, the urban bathhouse called SOAK identifies with a changing urban landscape and literally pops-up where there is interim use for creative activity, simultaneously taking advantage of lower real estate costs and incubating activity in up-and-coming neighbourhoods. With its unique anti-spa ethos, SOAK creates an experiential bridge between the ancient practice of ritual ablutions and a modern approach to wellness that makes “soaking” a social practice.

SOAK Urban bathhouse project San Francisco by Nell Waters and Rebar
Exploded diagram showing components – click for larger image

SOAK provides a dynamic space for personal wellness, connected experiences, and healthy hedonist gatherings. Built from repurposed shipping containers, the structure of SOAK helps reframe an answer to the question: what is wellness? In part, SOAK’s aim is to change the way we think about water-intensive day spas, instead substituting a creatively designed ecological bathhouse for a modern, urban environment. This container-spa joins the wave of tactical urbanism currently happening in San Francisco and other cargotecture projects that have created a local zeitgeist around the recognisably corrugated exterior. No city is better positioned to launch this first iteration of the mobile, pop-up spa.

SOAK Urban bathhouse project San Francisco by Nell Waters and Rebar
Diagram showing cycle of urban land use – click for larger image

Inspired by saunas in Amsterdam, Japanese bathing culture, and San Francisco’s former Sutro Baths, SOAK’s founder, Nell Waters, consulted designers about building a truly ecological urban bathhouse. Was there a way to scale back the opulent use of natural resources? Could they redefine the meaning of wellness through the materials used? Could social interaction replace meditative silence? At SOAK, sustainability, sociability, and healthy hedonism are the guiding principles.

SOAK Urban bathhouse project San Francisco by Nell Waters and Rebar
Ground floor plan – click for larger image

Its structure demonstrates its flexibility. Two shipping containers surround an interior courtyard, one housing the changing facilities, lounge and restrooms, the other housing the hot tubs, a roof deck and sauna. The bathhouse seamlessly transitions between interior space and garden, inviting visitors to soak in the heat, cool off under a cold plunge bucket in the garden, rest among the plants, and lounge with a view of the city on the roof deck. Greywater from hot tubs, sinks and showers is collected and filtered through surge tanks, purifying plants and particle filters. Filtered water is then used to irrigate the siteʼs permanent garden.

SOAK Urban bathhouse project San Francisco by Nell Waters and Rebar
First floor plan – click for larger image

Take the urban bathhouse concept to its extreme, and you get SOAK: a pop-up spa inside of shipping containers. Mobile, autonomous, and sleek. One step further and you get something more. An urban bathhouse for healthy hedonists. SOAK hired the San Francisco based Rebar Design Studio and principal Blaine Merker to design the urban bathhouse because of their smart creative process, and award winning reputation.

The post Ecological urban spa made from shipping
containers planned for San Francisco
appeared first on Dezeen.

Renovation of the Rácz Thermal Bath by Budapesti Műhely

Hungarian studio Budapesti Műhely has restored the interior of one of Budapest’s oldest bathhouses by replacing the vaulted walls of the warm water hall and shower room, leaving the bubble-shaped backs exposed (+ slideshow).

Renovation of the Rácz Thermal Baths by Budapesti Műhely

The Rácz Thermal Bath was first constructed in the sixteenth century and extended 300 years later, when architect Miklós Ybl added the newer romantic-style bath halls and connecting shower corridor.

Renovation of the Rácz Thermal Baths by Budapesti Műhely

Parts of the building were destroyed in World War II and the architects decided not to rebuild the brick walls behind the new vaults, instead leaving them exposed so that visitors can see the curved structures lining the hallway.

Renovation of the Rácz Thermal Baths by Budapesti Műhely

“As a result of our method, the richly formed interiors have been renovated by the architectural tools of their times, but the halls have received frivolous shapes never seen before,” explained architect Tamás Dévény.

Renovation of the Rácz Thermal Baths by Budapesti Műhely

Other new walls have been created with transparent glass to maximise views through the building.

Renovation of the Rácz Thermal Baths by Budapesti Műhely

The architects noticed that round skylights are a motif that unites the different periodical styles of the rooms, so added more to the renovated spaces.

Renovation of the Rácz Thermal Baths by Budapesti Műhely

“Through these holes both the sunlight and the artificial light can reach the building’s lower levels and the different floors can cause strange light effects to the other floors above or under each other,” said Dévény.

Renovation of the Rácz Thermal Baths by Budapesti Műhely

Despite the contemporary additions, Dévény says they still used traditional building techniques. “There is no electrical light, no heating system or mechanical ventilation in the Turkish bath,” he said. “Also the water pressure in the Ybl Bathing Halls is at the same level as it was possible to make in 1865.”

Renovation of the Rácz Thermal Baths by Budapesti Műhely

Other baths we’ve featured include a Jewish bathhouse in Mexico and thermal baths in Switzerland.

Photography is by Tamas Bujnovszky.

Here’s some more information from writer Brigitta Bugya:


Renovation of the Rácz Thermal Bath
Location: Budapest, Hungary

Routed back to the 16th century, to the Ottoman times, when the central and southern territories of the medieval Hungarian Kingdom was ruled by the Turkish Empire for 150 years, the Rácz Thermal Bath is one of the oldest bathing building in Budapest. Heading towards completion, its renovation shows the original spatial appearance precisely how the different historical periods layered above each other and formed a complex arrangement through centuries. Led by the architectural firm Budapesti Műhely, the reconstruction paid attention not just to the building’s overall image, but also to the original technical inventions of the Bath.

Renovation of the Rácz Thermal Baths by Budapesti Műhely

Historical background

Situated at the foot of Gellért Hill, the Bath was founded probably during the ruling time of Sokollu Mustafa Pasha around 1560. The Turkish bath, the oldest part of the building, stayed fortunately unharmed when the long Turkish siege was over after the Battle of Buda (1686). As a result, the building’s ownership went for a while to the Austrian Kaiserlich Chamber and then in the 1860s to the Heinrich family. The wealthy family commissioned Miklós Ybl, a renowned architect of his time, to renovate (1864-65) and to extend the building with several new bathing parts (1869-70) in his romantic style. But before any extension could be made, the Heinrich family had to purchase the necessary ground floor areas in small plots one by one, since this part of Buda was a densely populated area at that time. This caused certain suddenness in the extension method and a highly complex spatial structure. Thus, the recent renovation had to solve not only the reconstruction of different styles, but also to harmonically unify the overlapping historical building parts with the new facilities.

Renovation of the Rácz Thermal Baths by Budapesti Műhely

The renovation

The building has been severely damaged during the World War II bombings and its condition became even worse due to the senselessly ordered demolitions of the 1960’s and to the decades of delay in the renovation process. Started finally in 2006, the work focused on the meticulous reconstruction of the original historical spaces and also of the Turkish era’s, the Baroque periods’ and the 19th century civic world’s bathing experience. Therefore, the architects renovated not only the original use of materials and the ornamental motifs with an extra care, but also the showering, lighting and heating techniques, the water’s pressure in accordance with the original customs of the different bathing halls. Thus the different historical times will become really sensible for the guests after the upcoming opening.

Contemporary architectural tools

White vaults in the newly built circulation spaces – Designed by Ybl, the Moresque Shower-hall and the connecting Warm Water Cupola-hall were completely destroyed by the above mentioned demolitions of the 1960s. Rebuilding these connecting parts, the architects’ intention was to maintain an unharmed historical experience in the building, meanwhile clearly expressing that these walls are not the original ones. Therefore, they decided upon building a 1:1 scale model according to the original plans and using a thin concrete shell structure (with a15 centimetres width) instead of the old brick walls with the variable thickness and straightened external surfaces as they were made in the 19th century’s building practice. Thus, the end result shows the interiors of the spaces in the same way as they used to look; meanwhile the exteriors got such vaulted shapes that have not existed before.

Transparency – The bath’s restored parts are joined by glass facades, corridors and internal spaces with glass walls. With this solution the several centuries old spaces received such an architectural frame that reveal as much as possible from the listed building’s historical values. Giving a harmonic overall appearance to the building the architects used a recurring motif throughout the whole building to connect the different historical periods’ styles in the complex spatial structure: a rounded skylight. Acting like a kind of reinterpretation of the Turkish bath’s opeion, the rounded, glassed skylights are organised in a regular raster and occur in some parts of the new building parts’ floor-space.

Renovation of the Rácz Thermal Baths by Budapesti Műhely

Project: Rácz Thermal Bath
Location: Hungary, 1013 Budapest, Hadnagy Street 8-10.

Leading architects: Tamás Dévényi, Csaba Valkai, Anikó Varga, Péter Kis
General design: Tamás Dévényi – Budapesti Műhely

Leading architects: Tamás Dévényi, Csaba Valkai, Anikó Varga, Péter Kis

Associate architects: Zoltán Bun, Gábor Balázsa, Orsolya Máté, Eszter Mihály, Donát Szakmári, Tamás Ükös, Viktor Vadász
Structural Engineering: András Szabó, Tamás Tamássy
Mechanical Engineering: Ervin Barta
Electrical Engineering: Ferenc Haasz, Gábor Somogyi
Landscape: Adrienne Szalkai
Public Utilities: Bálint Simon
Archaeologist: Adrienn Papp
Historical research: Ferenc Bor, György Bartos

Year designed: 2007

The post Renovation of the Rácz Thermal Bath
by Budapesti Műhely
appeared first on Dezeen.