“Prison-like” student housing wins Carbuncle Cup 2013

Carbuncle Cup 2013 winner - 465 Caledonian Road

News: a student housing block in London with a retained brick warehouse facade has been named Britain’s worst building of the year.

Building Design magazine has awarded the annual Carbuncle Cup award to a student accommodation block at 465 Caledonian Road in Islington, branding it the ugliest building to be designed in the UK over the past 12 months.

Designed by British firm Stephen George and Partners for University College London, the new building replaced a historic red brick warehouse which was demolished during the build. The original facade was retained and positioned in front of the new building.

Carbuncle Cup 2013 winner - 465 Caledonian Road

“The original frontage has been retained in a cynical gesture towards preservation. But its failings go deeper,” said the judges. “This is a building that the jury struggled to see as remotely fit for human occupation.”

The jury commented that the majority of bedrooms within the new housing block lack adequate daylight, offer little privacy for the occupants and that those facing the retained facade have no view outside.

“The inmates living behind the massive masonry ruin will acutely feel the heritage of the retained wall, but it is not clear they will be able to see out. Perhaps the architects were influenced by the historic Pentonville Prison down the road,” suggested one nominator.

Carbuncle Cup 2013 winner - 465 Caledonian Road

Other shortlisted projects included a 24-metre viewing tower that looks like a helter skelter, a student housing development in Oxford and a sports centre in Wales – known to locals as The Dumpster.

Last year, the title was given to Grimshaw for a steel and glass cocoon containing the historic Cutty Sark tea clipper.

Here’s the full announcement:


Scandalous student housing scoops the award for Britain’s worst new building

A multimillion-pound block of student accommodation on London’s Caledonian Road has been named the UK’s worst new building.

465 Caledonian Road, designed by Stephen George and Partners for University College London, was once a historic red brick warehouse that has now been largely demolished despite being protected.

The original frontage has been retained in a cynical gesture towards preservation. But its failings go deeper: this is a building that the jury struggled to see as remotely fit for human occupation.

The majority of rooms lack adequate daylight, offer little privacy and a significant number facing the retained facade have no direct view out at all.

“There is no small irony in the fact that the building stands on the same street as HMP Pentonville,” said BD executive editor and Carbuncle Cup juror Ellis Woodman.

“As the first intake of students move into their dark and far from private rooms next month, they might be forgiven for wondering why the prisoners have been provided with the better view.”

Carbuncle Cup 2013 winner - 465 Caledonian Road

The building was originally refused planning consent by Islington Council but was approved on appeal by the planning inspectorate on the grounds that students don’t require the same quality of accommodation as the rest of society.

The runner-up for the Carbuncle Cup, which is awarded annually by the leading architecture industry title Building Design (BD), was also student accommodation.

Student housing is one of the few building types that has continued to be built in large quantity throughout the downturn and all too frequently to a level of quality that is little short of an insult to the buildings’ inhabitants.

“A look at the rapidly growing student accommodation sector provides an insight into trends in property development globally, and is alarming for lovers of the city and of architecture,” said Hank Dittmar, Carbuncle Cup juror and special advisor to HRH the Prince of Wales on Global Urbanisation.

“It seems to be felt that occupancy of less than a year and busy student lifestyles mean that standards can be reduced.”

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Carbuncle Cup 2013 shortlist revealed

Carbuncle Cup 2013 shortlist

News: a 24 metre tall viewing tower that looks like a helter skelter and a student housing development in Oxford have been included in a shortlist for the ugliest building completed in the UK in the last 12 months.

Carbuncle Cup 2013 shortlist
Castle Mill housing, Port Meadow, Oxford, by Frankham Consultancy Group

Building Design magazine has unveiled the shortlist for its Carbuncle Cup 2013 award today.

Other projects running for the title of worst designed building include a sports centre in Wales – known to locals as ‘the dumpster’ – and an 25-storey residential tower in east London that one nominator described as a “hideous monstrosity blighting the skyline off Bethnal Green Road”.

Carbuncle Cup 2013 shortlist
Avant Garde, 34-42 Bethnal Green Road, London, by Stock Woolstencroft

The Castle Mill housing development that has been built near a beauty spot in Oxford was the most nominated project in the history of the Carbuncle Cup.

“A deeply unimaginative and impoverished design which would lower the spirits whatever its setting, but on the edge of one of central England’s most important and ancient landscapes, it is an outrage,” said one nominator.

Carbuncle Cup 2013 shortlist
Porth Eirias Watersports Centre, Colwyn Bay, Wales, by K2 Architects

The six buildings competing for the title are:

» Castle Mill housing, Port Meadow, Oxford, by Frankham Consultancy Group
» Port Meadow, 465 Caledonian Road, London, by Stephen George and Partners
» Avant Garde, 34-42 Bethnal Green Road, London, by Stock Woolstencroft
» Redcar Beacon aka the Vertical Pier, Redcar, by Smeeden Foreman Architects
» Porth Eirias Watersports Centre, Colwyn Bay, Wales, by K2 Architects
» Premier Inn, Lambeth, London, by Hamiltons

Carbuncle Cup 2013 shortlist
Premier Inn, Lambeth, London, by Hamiltons

The winner will be selected by a jury that includes Building Design magazine executive editor Ellis Woodman and critics Owen Hatherley and Gillian Darley.

The winner will be announced on 30 August 2013.

Carbuncle Cup 2013 shortlist
465 Caledonian Road, London, by Stephen George & Partners

Last year, the Carbuncle Cup shortlist included the ArcelorMittal Orbit sculpture at the Olympic Park and the Titanic Belfast museum. Grimshaw architects’ steel and glass cocoon containing the historic Cutty Sark tea clipper was named the ugliest new building for 2012See all our coverage of the Carbuncle Cup »

The release of this list coincides with the recent announcement of the shortlist for the 2013 RIBA Stirling Prize, awarded to the best building by a British-registered architect.

Photographs are from anonymous nominators. The top image is of the Redcar Beacon by Smeeden Foreman Architects.

Here’s the announcement from Building Design magazine:


Carbuncle Cup 2013 shortlist revealed

The six buildings that are one step closer to winning architecture’s wooden spoon…

Launched eight years ago, The Carbuncle Cup was designed as a humorous counterpart to the prestigious Stirling Prize. Since then it has become a regular – if controversial – fixture in the architectural calendar.

Even in times of economic turmoil, when few major projects are being built, hundreds of architectural travesties are allowed to pass through our planning system on a weekly basis. Few of these are ever truly exposed for the awfulness they represent – lazy design, compromised planning departments and cynical development.

After years of starchitect boom, this year Carbuncle Cup has returned to its roots, seeking out some of the worst everyday projects from across the country.

Our shortlist was whittled down from public nominations submitted to BD via email. Public comments on Bdonline supporting or against each nomination were considered during the shortlisting.

A final winner will be selected by a jury including BD executive editor Ellis Woodman and critics Owen Hatherley and Gillian Darley. The winner will be announced on August 30.

The Carbuncle Cup Shortlist 2013:

1. Castle Mill housing, Port Meadow, Oxford, by Frankham Consultancy Group

The Castle Mill housing development in Oxford is the most nominated project in the history of Carbuncle Cup. Since BD first named the development as one of this year’s nominees, the controversy surrounding the development has escalated further and it is now at the centre of a judicial review bid.

2. Port Meadow, 465 Caledonian Road, London, by Stephen George & Partners

Also in the student housing category is this rather excellent example of facadism which can be spotted on London’s Caledonian Road.

3. Avant Garde, 34-42 Bethnal Green Road, London, by Stock Woolstencroft

Sticking with residential monstrosities: this grossly over-scaled development in East London was bad enough before they gave it such an inappropriate name.

4. Redcar Beacon aka the Vertical Pier, Redcar, by Smeeden Foreman Architects

Redcar’s ‘beacon’; shape making gone horribly, horribly wrong.

5. Porth Eirias Watersports Centre, Colwyn Bay, Wales, by K2 Architects

Porth Eirias sports centre had so much potential before multiple revisions and cost cutting led to the Creation of this, known not-so-affectionally as ‘the dumpster’ by locals.

6. Premier Inn, Lambeth, London, by Hamiltons

The Premier Inn in Lambeth is a travesty in more ways than one – we shudder at its lumpen form and mourn the building demolished to make way for it.

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Carbuncle Cup 2012 shortlist announced


Dezeen Wire:
the ArcelorMittal Orbit sculpture at the Olympic Park and the restoration of historic tea clipper the Cutty Sark are included in the shortlist for the 2012 Carbuncle Cup, awarded by Building Design magazine to the ugliest building completed in the UK in the last 12 months.

The six competing for the title are:

» Firepool Lock Housing, Taunton, by Andrew Smith Architects
» Titanic Belfast museum by Todd Architects and Civic Arts
» Mann Island, Liverpool, by Broadway Malyan
» ArcellorMittal Orbit, Olympic Park, London, by Anish Kapoor and Cecil Balmond
» Cutty Sark renovation, London, by Grimshaw Architects
» Shard End Library, Birmingham, by Idp Partnership

The winner will be announced on 24 August.

The release of this list coincides with the announcement of the shortlist for the RIBA Stirling Prize, awarded to the best building by a British-registered architect. See the six Stirling Prize contenders here.

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shortlist announced
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