“We’re sharing the house with the studio” – Carl Turner on Slip House

In this movie by film studio Stephenson/Bishop, architect Carl Turner describes the importance of flexibility in the London house he designed for himself and his partner, which last night was awarded the RIBA Manser Medal 2013 for the best new house in the UK.

Located in Brixton, south London, Slip House is a three-storey residence with walls made from planks of translucent glass and staggered upper floors that cantilever towards the street.

Slip House by Carl Turner Architects

The house features a spacious ground floor that is currently used by Carl Turner as a studio for his architectural practice.

“The house is really flexible,” he explains. “We’ve got this amazing space on the ground floor that we’re currently using as our office and studio space, but the idea is that if we move out of there, we can use the whole space as a house again.”

Slip House by Carl Turner Architects

The first floor accommodates an open-plan living and dining space, but Turner says this space could be easily converted into bedrooms if the ground floor was turned back into a living room.

“It’s a kind of frame structure and that allows us these open floor spaces that mean we can then have really flexible uses,” he adds.

Slip House by Carl Turner Architects

Slip House was awarded the RIBA Manser Medal 2013 last night in a ceremony that also saw an addition to a twelfth-century castle in Warwickshire win the Stirling Prize. It was praised for sustainable features that include rooftop solar panels, a rain-water-harvesting system, a ground-sourced heat pump and a wildflower roof.

“Slip House demonstrates an admirable commitment to the creation of an exemplary low-energy house, with a suite of sustainable enhancements that are integrated effectively into the building design,” said the judges. “However, at no point do the sustainable ambitions of the project crowd out or dominate the refined quality of the spaces that are created.”

Slip House by Carl Turner Architects

The project was completed last year and first featured on Dezeen in September. Another project by Carl Turner Architects is an extension to the couple’s former home in Norfolk.

Other recently completed houses in the UK include a Corten steel bunker that provides a home and studio for a photographer and a small home that looks a gingerbread house. See more British houses »

Slip House by Carl Turner Architects

Movie is by Stephenson/Bishop. Photography is by Tim Crocker.

The post “We’re sharing the house with the studio”
– Carl Turner on Slip House
appeared first on Dezeen.

Slip House by Carl Turner Architects

Planks of translucent glass provide the walls for this house in south London designed by architect Carl Turner for himself and his partner (+ slideshow).

Slip House by Carl Turner Architects

Positioned amongst a row of traditional Victorian houses, Slip House is a three-storey residence with staggered upper floors that cantilever towards the street.

Slip House by Carl Turner Architects

“We set out with a simple sculptural form of three cantilevered, or slipped, boxes,” explained Turner. “The upper box houses our living space, the middle box houses sleeping and bathing, and the ground box is given over to a multi-purpose space, currently housing our studio.”

Slip House by Carl Turner Architects

The translucent glass walls extend up to form a parapet around a terrace on the roof, and also surround a set of photovoltaic panels that generate electricity.

Slip House by Carl Turner Architects

Other sustainable features include a wildflower roof above the ground floor, a rain-water-harvesting system and a ground-sourced heat pump that generates energy.

Slip House by Carl Turner Architects

Inside the house, the ground floor studio features a moveable study area, comprising a combined desk and shelving unit attached to wheels.

Slip House by Carl Turner Architects

On the first and second floors, rooms are equipped with inbuilt storage walls, so residents can hide their belongings away behind plywood screens.

Slip House by Carl Turner Architects

Floors throughout the house are concrete and sit flush against all the walls and fittings.

Slip House by Carl Turner Architects

Another project we’ve featured by Carl Turner Architects is the extension to the couple’s former home in Norfolk – see it here.

Slip House by Carl Turner Architects

See more houses on Dezeen »

Slip House by Carl Turner Architects

Photography is by Tim Crocker.

Slip House by Carl Turner Architects

Here’s a project description from Carl Turner Architects:


Slip House, Brixton.

Occupying one of four plots forming a gap in a typical Brixton terrace, Slip House constitutes a new prototype for adaptable terraced housing.

Slip House by Carl Turner Architects

Three simple ‘slipped’ orthogonal box forms break up the bulk of the building and give it its striking sculptural quality. The top floor is clad in milky, translucent glass planks, which continue past the roof deck to create a high level ‘sky garden’.

Slip House by Carl Turner Architects

Designed to Code for Sustainable Homes Level 5, it features ‘energy piles’ utilising a solar assisted ground source heat pump creating a thermal store beneath the building. PV’s, a wildflower roof, rain water harvesting, reduced water consumption, mechanical ventilation with heat recovery within an airtight envelope with massive levels of insulation make this one of the most energy efficient houses built in the UK.

Slip House by Carl Turner Architects

A prototype brownfield development offering dense, flexible, urban living – the house is a vehicle for in-house research into sustainable design, seamlessly integrating the often conflicting aesthetic requirements of architecture and alternative low energy systems. We are working to develop this model for multiple developments and as affordable housing.

Slip House by Carl Turner Architects

Living and working (‘Living over the shop’) is something that really interests us. We see a prototype new ‘terraced’ house, squeezed into under-utilised city (Brownfield) sites. This flexible type of home can allow for the artisan or home-worker to sub-let or downsize. This can enliven local communities and produce ‘homes’ which create opportunities rather than be dormitories or financial assets. Slip House is flexible and can be used as a single home, studio workspace and apartment, or two apartments.

Slip House by Carl Turner Architects

The perimeter walls are load bearing, freeing up the internal areas of supporting columns or additional load bearing walls. The house’s open-plan layout ensures that walls / dividers are simple to erect and require minimal construction effort. This aspect of Slip House is not only financially sustainable but also environmentally so, as it helps to ensure the permanence of the overall structure, as minimal modifications can allow the house to adapt to changing lives and living situations indefinitely.

Slip House by Carl Turner Architects

Our approach was to model the building as a series of simple orthogonal box forms that use the full width of the site. This allows future buildings to simply adjoin the flank walls.

Slip House by Carl Turner Architects

The house takes the idea of three slipped boxes. The boxes are carefully placed to maximise light and outlook from inside while not intruding on neighbour’s outlook. The shifting planes also break up the bulk of the building and give it its sculptural quality.

Slip House by Carl Turner Architects

Axonometric diagram

Slip House by Carl Turner Architects

Ground floor plan

Slip House by Carl Turner Architects

First floor plan

Slip House by Carl Turner Architects

Second floor plan

Slip House by Carl Turner Architects

Roof plan

Slip House by Carl Turner Architects

Section – click above for larger image

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Carl Turner Architects
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Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

Oriented strand board lines every wall, floor and ceiling inside this residential barn extension in Norfolk, England, by London studio Carl Turner Architects.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

Black-stained timber clads the exterior of the gabled building, named Stealth Barn, and it sits perpendicular to a larger brick barn that the architects previously converted into a residence.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

The interior is divided into rooms that allow it function as a guest house, although the clients also use the barn as a meeting place or studio.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

Above: photograph is by Carl Turner

The OSB surfaces are intended to be reminiscent of the straw bales that fill the barns of many farms nearby.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

Above: photograph is by Carl Turner

Another project we’ve featured from the agricultural landscape of Norfolk is an extension to a mill-keeper’s house – see it here.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

Photography is by Tim Crocker, apart from where otherwise stated.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

Here’s some more text from Carl Turner Architects:


Stealth Barn- Carl Turner Architects

Stealth Barn is a project that sits next to and complements Ochre Barn, a large threshing barn converted by CTA to a home and studio.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

This addition was to provide a self-contained unit that could equally act as a guest house, studio or meeting place, depending on time of year and workloads: a retreat, but also a place of inspiration, enjoyment and a place of work and home without compromising the experience of either.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

Above: photograph is by Jeremy Phillips

Sitting in the exposed expanse of the Cambridgeshire fens, it is a bold, simple form, reminiscent of the barn it accompanies.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

Above: photograph is by Jeremy Phillips

Placed perpendicular to the existing barn, it stands to create and define a slightly more sheltered and casual garden which melts into the fens. This clear and simple move also hints at the memory of a former farm yard.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

Above: photograph is by Jeremy Phillips

Stealth Barn pays respect to the form of the agricultural context but contrasts with the traditional barn. Stealth Barn is a sharp black mass – a shadow of the adjacent barn or a silhouette on the horizon.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

It is a robust exteriorwrapped with a restricted palette, devoid of fussy detail, and formed to withstand its exposed position.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

On the interior, this toughness is inverted through the inclusion of a warmer OSB; it wraps fully around the space to form angles reminiscent of the adjacent barns divided with straw bales.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

Above: photograph is by Carl Turner

It also creates an immersive interior landscape with spaces simply disected in a semi open-plan manner to create compartments.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

Each room has aspects overlooking the fields which, although open, are very much seen through and out of this interior, providing a sense of protection and warmth.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

The arrangement of the main spaces into simple pockets is key to facilitating the barn’s multifunctional use – for it to become both a bedroom and a meeting room, a dining room and a studio space. It can be all of these things equally without ever feeling overly domestic or of business.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

Stealth Barn is a project instigated and overseen by Carl Turner Architects.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

We have acted as developer Architects and, in turn, the project has allowed the office scope to experiment, learn and test ideas.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

It was completed at the end of August 2011.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects