Redbridge Welcome Centre by Peter Barber Architects

Slideshow: London studio Peter Barber Architects has completed a centre for drug and alcohol rehabilitation in Ilford, northeast London.

Redbridge Welcome Centre by Peter Barber Architects

The four-storey Redbridge Welcome Centre takes the form of several irregularly stacked volumes, with an uppermost level that cantilevers out towards the road.

Redbridge Welcome Centre by Peter Barber Architects

As well as providing drop-in facilities on its lower levels, the building contains temporary accommodation for homeless people upstairs.

Redbridge Welcome Centre by Peter Barber Architects

Each of the ten en suite rooms faces a private garden that the building wraps around at the back.

Redbridge Welcome Centre by Peter Barber Architects

The architects designed a similar centre in south London a few years ago – take a look here.

Redbridge Welcome Centre by Peter Barber Architects

Photography is by Morley von Sternberg.

Redbridge Welcome Centre by Peter Barber Architects

Here’s a few more details from Peter Barber Architects:


Redbridge Welcome Centre is a new community and homeless project housed in a spectacular state of the art building on a prominent site in Ilford.

Redbridge Welcome Centre by Peter Barber Architects

The Welcome Centre houses drug and alcohol units, training rooms and drop-in facilities in dramatic double height spaces at ground and 1st floor level.

Redbridge Welcome Centre by Peter Barber Architects

Light and airy residential accommodation is provided in 10 en-suite rooms at 2nd and 3rd floor.

Redbridge Welcome Centre by Peter Barber Architects

Spaces are flooded with light from fully glazed facades and all rooms have uninterrupted views into a secluded garden at the rear.

Redbridge Welcome Centre by Peter Barber Architects

The building is composed of a series of folded planes forming a continuous ribbon of structure from pavement entrance ramp to roof.

Redbridge Welcome Centre by Peter Barber Architects

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Redbridge Welcome Centre by Peter Barber Architects

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Redbridge Welcome Centre by Peter Barber Architects

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Redbridge Welcome Centre by Peter Barber Architects

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Redbridge Welcome Centre by Peter Barber Architects

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Redbridge Welcome Centre by Peter Barber Architects

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Redbridge Welcome Centre by Peter Barber Architects

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Redbridge Welcome Centre by Peter Barber Architects

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Redbridge Welcome Centre by Peter Barber Architects

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Gavroche centre for children by SOA Architectes

Children Centre by SOA

Workshops clad in timber batons sit atop this children’s centre outside Paris by French architects SOA.

Children Centre by SOA

Surrounded by houses and offices, the two-storey Gavroche centre for children provides an education centre at the heart of a local community.

Children Centre by SOA

Playrooms occupy the building’s white-rendered ground floor, including a games library, a water games room and a multipurpose hall that opens out to an enclosed playground.

Children Centre by SOA

Upstairs, the box-like timber volumes contain cooking and reading studios, as well as a staff room and another water games rooms.

Children Centre by SOA

Glass doors lead out from here onto three separate roof decks, which face west towards a neighbouring park.

Children Centre by SOA

We published another interesting community centre in France this year – see our earlier story about a spiralling centre in Lille.

Children Centre by SOA

Photography is by Clément Guillaume.

Children Centre by SOA

Here’s some more text from SOA:


Gavroche centre for children
Multi care centre for children and games library

Children Centre by SOA

The Gavroche centre for children is a cultural and educational facility situated in the heart of the Victor Hugo development. The latter is part of a large urban renewal scheme consisting principally of housing, offices and commercial buildings organised around the Victor Hugo Garden.

Children Centre by SOA

The complex triangular plot is located within a heterogeneous built fabric: the park to the West, old town houses to the North and several new 5 storey buildings to the South.

Children Centre by SOA

The depth of the site provides the building with three different orientations. The workshops and games rooms are therefore turned towards the garden, most of the spaces benefiting from an unobstructed view out onto greenery.

Children Centre by SOA

The entrance space, with its forecourt set back from the street, acts as an urban connection with the rue Arago. The building slots into this complex site, preserving, as much as possible, a certain continuity with the existing urban fabric as well as with the layout of the Victor Hugo Garden.

Children Centre by SOA

The children’s centre stands out as a public facility. The scheme demonstrates cultural, educational and civic intentions with a strong social integration objective. The centre is a place for educational leisure, where children and adolescents are able to develop their own individuality through collective games and workshops.

Children Centre by SOA

The building’s functional organisation evolves around the central hall, focal point of the centre, entirely open to the public. Firstly, the scheme rests on a plinth consisting of horizontal lines echoing the configuration of the park. This base supports a number of timber boxes, which appear to be light structures with varied panelling, set out in a fragmented way.

Children Centre by SOA

The interior layout of the ground floor favours open spaces with maximum transparency, adapted to natural lighting requirements, as well as acoustic conditions. The rigorous organisation of the different entities allows for a great legibility of the various uses, while facilitating the children and visitor’s orientation throughout the building. This is also achieved with the use of a colorimetric language and appropriate signage.

Children Centre by SOA

Location: 50 rue arago, Zac Victor Hugo, Saint-Ouen, France
Client: City of Saint-Ouen
Project management: SOA (commissioned architect), Starck (feasibility consultants and economists), GA (acousticians)
Budget: 2.49 m€ht net floor area 851m²
Environmental aspects and performance standards: HQE environmental approach, THPE certification
Contract: full contract
Schedule studies: 40 weeks, site work 70 weeks
Completed: in 2011

Yountville Community Centre by Siegel & Strain Architects

Yountville Community Centre by Siegel and Strain Architects

Fir trusses create triangles that meet in the middle of the ceiling at a community hall in California designed by Siegel & Strain Architects.

Yountville Community Centre by Siegel and Strain Architects

A grid of tension cables supports the structural trusses, while slatted pine panels fill the spaces between them.

Yountville Community Centre by Siegel and Strain Architects

A central skylight runs along the length of the ceiling to provide natural light.

Yountville Community Centre by Siegel and Strain Architects

The 25 metre-long hall has large wooden doors resembling those of a barn.

Yountville Community Centre by Siegel and Strain Architects

The hall was completed by the architects in 2009, as were a library, youth centre and meeting rooms contained within the same building.

Yountville Community Centre by Siegel and Strain Architects

Other popular multi-purpose halls featured on Dezeen this year include one with an arched steel shell and another with a facade of shutters.

Yountville Community Centre by Siegel and Strain Architects

Photography is by David Wakely.

Here’s a more detailed description from the architects:


Yountville Community Center

For decades, the residents of Yountville, California, a rural town in Napa County, relied on a small 1920s-era community hall and a hodgepodge of rented spaces to host community events. The hall was in need of renovation, ill-equipped to support art classes and lacking in outdoor recreation spaces. In addition, the town had outgrown its library. In 1998, after surveying residents’ needs, the municipality embarked on a planning process for an expanded town center at the heart of town.

The Yountville Town Center opened in November 2009, weaving new and existing buildings and outdoor rooms into a place designed to enrich community life. Designed by Siegel & Strain Architects and located on a 2.5-acre site on Yountville’s main street, the town center consists of a new 10,000-square-foot community center, the renovated 4,800-square-foot community hall, and the addition of a sheriff’s substation to the adjacent post office. The new community center houses a branch library, multipurpose room, teen center, and meeting and program spaces. It opens onto a new town square framed by the existing community hall and the post office.

Yountville Community Centre by Siegel and Strain Architects

Building exteriors blend with the rural character, while inside the spaces are light and airy. The large multipurpose room, 80 feet by 50 feet, is day-lit along the roof’s spine by a ridge skylight, which has splayed walls that soften the light as it enters the room. A unique combination of Douglas fir trusses and cables enables the roof’s structural support system to have a minimal presence in the room and avoids blocking daylight from above. A large, covered porch of red cedar on two sides of the town square connects the community hall and community center, providing shade in the summer. Barn doors extend the multipurpose room onto the adjacent barbecue patio.

Targeted to achieve a LEED Platinum rating from the U.S. Green Building Council and to achieve energy savings of 44% over Title 24, the design integrates a range of green features. Walkways and bike paths connect the center to surrounding neighborhoods and main street activities. Exterior sunshades, a highly insulated building envelope, and “cool” standing seam metal roofs reduce energy use.

Energy-efficient mechanical systems are integrated with ground-source heat pumps for heating and cooling. A building integrated management system takes advantage of the temperate climate by opening skylights and windows on days with mild temperatures. Operable skylights, controlled by CO2 and rain sensors, and operable windows provide natural ventilation and balanced natural illumination.

Roof-mounted photovoltaic laminates on the new and existing buildings supply energy. Water-conserving plumbing fixtures, harvested rainwater, drip irrigation, subsurface irrigation, and drought-tolerant native plants further reduce water use. The existing parking lot was regraded to slope naturally so that rainwater could be harvested in a bioswale. Overall, site design reduces storm runoff by 40% over preconstruction conditions.
Building materials were selected to minimize life-cycle impacts and provide light and airy interiors free of formaldehyde and volatile organic compounds. Buildings feature durable, recycled content cement-fiber shingles and metal roofs. The new building’s red cedar cladding and Alaskan yellow cedar sunscreens and entrances are regionally harvested. Slatted wood ceilings are locally sourced white pine, and the existing community hall’s oak floor was reused. Over 75% of the wood is certified by the Forest Stewardship Council.

Yountville Community Centre by Siegel and Strain Architects

Sustainability may not have been stated as part of the original vision, but the desire to incorporate green design grew over time as the project developed, championed by both civic leaders and the community. Now Yountville has a new “front porch,” bringing together residents of all ages while blending an agrarian vernacular with time-honored sustainable practices.

Architect: Siegel & Strain Architects
Location: Yountville, VA
Client: Town of Yountville
Date of occupancy: December 2009
Gross square footage: 20,000
Construction cost: $9.8M
Contractor: Swank Construction

Structural Engineer: Endres Ware Architects Engineers
Mechanical/Electrical/Plumbing: Timmons Design Engineers
Civil Engineer: Coastland Civil Engineering
Landscape Architect: John Northmore Roberts & Associates
Lighting: Alice Prussin Lighting Design
Commissioning: Enovity Inc.
Specifications: Topflight Specs
Construction Manager: Pound Management


See also:

.

Milson Island Sports Hall
by Allen Jack+Cottier
Sports Hall by Franz
Architekten & Atelier Mauch
Community centre by MARP
and Dévényi és Társa

Community centre by MARP and Dévényi és Társa

Community centre by MARP and Dévényi és Társa

Square windows with various dimensions sporadically puncture the plain brick exterior of a community centre in Hungary.

Community centre by MARP and Devenyi es Tarsa

Architects MARP and Dévényi és Társa designed the two-storey centre beside a school in the town of Sásd.

Community centre by MARP and Devenyi es Tarsa

The building has an asymmetrically pitched roof with eaves along one edge that match the height of those on an adjacent school.

Community centre by MARP and Devenyi es Tarsa

The centre provides a computer lab, music room, cafe and study room for pupils of the school, plus a library and gym hall for the use of the whole community.

Community centre by MARP and Devenyi es Tarsa

A handful of projects in Hungary have been featured on Dezeen in recent years, including a staircase resembling a wedge of Swiss cheese and a faceted stone concert hallsee all our stories about projects in Hungary here.

Community centre by MARP and Devenyi es Tarsa

Photography is by Zsolt Frikker.

Community centre by MARP and Devenyi es Tarsa

Here is a more detailed description from MARP:


Community centre by MARP

Sásd is a town of 3500 inhabitants located in the northern part of Baranya county. Its local government set to realizing the new “Integrated Community and Cultural Institution” with high ambitions and the use of EU funds on the premises adjacent to the existing elementary school providing for the educational needs of the Sásd microregion.

Community centre by MARP and Devenyi es Tarsa

Directly adjoining the existing school buildings renovated in the framework of the present investment, the new structure is furnished with rooms for educational activities (e.g. study circle facilities, computer lab, music room, cafeteria and corresponding service units), functions serving the wider town community (e.g. library) and multi-use rooms (gym and events hall). All these features clearly demonstrate the intention to create a cultural centre for the town and the whole Sásd microregion in the form of a new Community House.

Community centre by MARP and Devenyi es Tarsa

When designing the new structure, we put priority on integrating it into its environment both intellectually and physically in a way that would make it stand out as an unmistakably contemporary and autonomous architectural proposition in its urban context. This process implied engaging in constant dialog with elements such as the somewhat fading, though characteristic tradition of brick homes in the surrounding built environment, the distinctive building line, nearby structures seen as significant, the presence of local monuments including a neighbouring church, the change of scale etc.

Community centre by MARP and Devenyi es Tarsa

Through condensing these complex functions, each calling for large surfaces, in a single edifice – though separating them might in have been an easier path to take – we wished to take on the tradition that still managed to incorporate changes of scale by delicately integrating major public buildings within their historic town setting. The greatest challenge in the design process was to find contemporary answers with credibility and a sense of proportion to the innumerable questions raised in the quest for integration while not losing track of different (financial, construction etc) aspects of reality.

Community centre by MARP and Devenyi es Tarsa

In positioning the building, we kept the traditional saw-toothed building line, and even filled the gaps formed over the years when previously existing buildings were demolished. The entrance could thus be joined to a public plaza which creates a picturesque way for visitors to approach the building as well as serving as the venue of important community activities (e.g. fairs).

Community centre by MARP and Devenyi es Tarsa

Besides the building line, the compact mass of the structure is shaped by a number of factors: it interacts with the oldest wing of the existing school, a brick structure from the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries, being adjacent to it and following its eaves line. From this virtual point of reference, the planes and edges defining the shape rise dynamically until the other half of the block, creating an intimate embrasured entrance below the library space.

Community centre by MARP and Devenyi es Tarsa

The asymmetry of the high-roofed format was designed to enable proportionate roof structures to face the road, emphasising the monolithic appearance of the structure due to the identity in the tone and materials used in the brick coverage of the façade and the tile roofing. This minimalist design indirectly alludes to the rigorous world of the monumental backyard brick sheds parallel to the streets, built behind the homes of German-speaking townsfolk.

Community centre by MARP and Devenyi es Tarsa

As befitting its intended community use, the building vigorously communicates with the town through the large surfaces comprised by the irregularly placed apertures on its front, transmitting the life going on within its walls. The homogenous arrangement of these openings highlights the large contiguous spaces they enclose. Their position, set in a plane to the north and in deep casements to the south interacts organically with the environmental conditions.

Community centre by MARP and Devenyi es Tarsa

Architect:
MARP / Márton Dévényi, Pál Gyürki-Kiss;
Dévényi és Társa Ltd. / Sándor Dévényi

Community centre by MARP and Devenyi es Tarsa

Engineering:
Marosterv Ltd. / Maros József, Maros Gergely;
EG Mérnöki Ltd. / Erős Gábor
Steel structures: Dr. Metzing Mérnöki Ltd. / Dr. Metzing Ferenc
Mechanical engineer: Dévényi és Társa Ltd. / László Skrobák

Community centre by MARP and Devenyi es Tarsa

Client: Sásd Town Council, Sásd, Hungary
Location: Szent Imre utca 25-27., 7370, Sásd, Hungary
Size: 2.600 m2
Beginning of conceptual design: February 2009
Construction period: 2010 – 2011


See also:

.

Centre for Neonatal Care
by Feilden Clegg Bradley
House for elderly people by
Aires Mateus Arquitectos
Neighbourhood Centre by
Colboc Franzen & Associés

Neighbourhood Centre by Colboc Franzen & Associés

Neighbourhood Centre by Colboc Franzen & Associés

Visitors can climb a staircase over the roof of this spiralling community centre in Lille by French architects Colboc Franzen & Associés.

Neighbourhood Centre by Colboc Franzen & Associés

The aluminium-clad building has a jolting helical shape that wraps around a central glass atrium.

Neighbourhood Centre by Colboc Franzen & Associés

External staircases connect landings and terraces on each of the four storeys.

Neighbourhood Centre by Colboc Franzen & Associés

The first three levels contain community facilities for different age ranges while the top floor comprises staff offices and accommodation.

Neighbourhood Centre by Colboc Franzen & Associés

More stories about projects in France »

Neighbourhood Centre by Colboc Franzen & Associés

Photography is by Paul Raftery.

Here are some more details from the architects:


L’Arbrisseau Neighbourhood Centre, Lille

A multi-facetted building for every generation

It’s impossible not to notice the L’Arbrisseau neighbourhood centre in the southern suburbs of Lille. Its helical shape, the staircase that winds itself up around the sides of the building and its aluminium cladding, like a space vessel’s, all make it stand out. They create a contrast with a rather disjointed and sometimes deprived urban environment that nonetheless holds some pleasant surprises, including a sunflower swimming pool around the back that is straight out of the Seventies.

Neighbourhood Centre by Colboc Franzen & Associés

However incongruous it might seem, the building was indeed built and designed together with local people and the city council. Users came up with ideas – ranging from the most trivial to the most metaphorical – that were included in the final project. They wanted an aquarium; they’ll find it behind the reception desk. They wanted a library; it’s there all right. But they also wanted a tree to make sure there was the symbol of their neighbourhood, which is called l’Arbrisseau (‘arbre’ is French for tree). And so they got a tree – a 12-metre tree of life with a terrace nestling on each level and a panoramic viewpoint at its tip.

Neighbourhood Centre by Colboc Franzen & Associés

It was Lille City Council’s ambition to create something ‘beautiful’ and ‘high quality’ in the ‘suburbs’. L’Arbrisseau is in the south of Lille, an area that is undergoing radical redevelopment after years of social and economic decline. There is clear political ambition and varied urban landscape offers great potential. This is a tight-knit community: people born in L’Arbrisseau often spend their whole lives here. The challenge for this project was to embody this sense of renewal as well as a certain community spirit.

Neighbourhood Centre by Colboc Franzen & Associés

The building is arranged in a spiral around a central atrium. This means that it faces no particular direction but instead speaks to everyone equally. The plain untreated aluminium cladding of the façade underscores this desire to standardize the sides of the building and adds to its magnetism; the building catches the light and focuses the sun’s rays to form an attractive, shimmering whole.

Neighbourhood Centre by Colboc Franzen & Associés

The project’s distinctive characteristic is that it is open to people of all ages. The tiny tots are on the ground floor, with a mother and child care centre, and a space to receive several groups of 0-4 year olds. Small and slightly older children are accommodated on the first floor, where there is an infant day centre (3-6), a ‘little wings’ area and activity rooms for 6-12 year olds as well as a reading corner. The second floor is the domain of the older generations. There is a multi-purpose hall (intended for weddings and other private and public celebrations) as well as an area used especially for adult integration courses such as cookery and computing. The third floor contains administrative offices and a four-room, on-site staff flat that includes a south-facing terrace. The building’s layout allows each age group to relate directly to the one below it and the one above. This is what makes it unique.

Neighbourhood Centre by Colboc Franzen & Associés

The mother and child care centre is linked to the first-floor centre for 4-12 year olds by a split-level garden. The tiny tots have direct access to the garden. The first floor in turn connects with the teenage and adult floor via the double-storey library. It also enjoys a terrace overhanging the garden. The teenage and adult floor offers a variety of activities ranging from the multi-purpose hall for concerts or weddings to cookery and sewing workshops. A terrace acts as a continuation of the hall and looks out over the grounds to the north. This floor communicates with the top storey of the building. The aim of superimposing the various schemes was to free up the greatest possible space for a garden around the bottom of the building. Stretching the building vertically increases its visibility and its prestige.

All of the different schemes are united around a common atrium. A concrete tower houses the facilities, staircases and lifts, as well as supporting the building. The design of this tower articulates the structural forces acting upon it and the toothing of the girders holding up the floors on either side. The solid, mineral mass and its extruded appearance also bring to mind the region’s characteristic underground chalk quarries (there is one behind the building).

Neighbourhood Centre by Colboc Franzen & Associés

The inside staircase echoes the cut-out façade of the building, allowing the light captured by the terraces filter through the tower like tree branches to produce complex and changing patterns of shadows in the atrium.

The spiral staircase that curls around the outside of the building has a landing – or terrace – on every level, each connected to the next by stairs. Users can get to their activities from outside and also climb up onto the roof of the structure. Here there is a panoramic viewpoint overlooking the L’Arbrisseau neighbourhood with the belfry of Lille City Hall in the distance. This reintegrates the L’Arbrisseau area into the fabric of the city of Lille as well as strengthening its local roots.

Neighbourhood Centre by Colboc Franzen & Associés

Last but not least, the fact that the building’s key elements – the libraries – are two storeys in height creates interesting spatial and visual effects as well as allowing the installation of raked seating. This encourages flexible and improvised use of the space, as befits a neighbourhood centre. It is easy to organise lectures, show videos or arrange reading corners on a particular theme; the terraces can be turned into a children’s playground at one moment and an area for adult activities the next and can also host film screenings, exhibitions and even open-air theatre.

The very particular volume distribution of the L’Arbrisseau neighbourhood centre is emphasised by its untreated aluminium and glass sheathing. There are openings here and there for plate-glass windows that afford different views and let in light. These are covered in materials (metal cladding, mirror glass) selected in accordance with the principles of eco-design and to guarantee users optimum visual and thermal conditions in both summer and winter.

Neighbourhood Centre by Colboc Franzen & Associés

Contracting authority: City of Lille
Architects: Colboc Franzen & Associés, Paris

Cost of construction: €4,076,000 excluding all tax

Area of the plot: 2,030 m2
Usable area: 1,190 m2
Net floor area: 1,779 m2
Gross floor area: 2,927 m2

Location: Crossroads of the future extension of rue de l’Asie and rue Vaisseau le Vengeur, 59000 Lille

Project management: Colboc Franzen & Associés
Project manager: Arnaud Sachet
Team: Ulrich Faudry, Malik Hammadi, Kerstin Heller, Bruno Sarles, Emmanuel Villoutreix, Lena Weis.
Research consultancy: INEX (fluids), C&E ingénierie (structure), JP Lamoureux (acoustician), BM Forgue (economist), PBP (OPC).

Beginning of studies: October 2007
Date of delivery: May 2011

Neighbourhood Centre by Colboc Franzen & Associés

Program

  • Basement: Technical premises + 8 parking spaces
  • Ground floor: Foyer, mother and child care centre, reception area for various groups, garden
  • 1st floor: Day centre without sleeping facilities, area for 6-12 year olds, terrace
  • 2nd floor: Area for 12-16 year olds, multi-purpose hall, area for adults, terrace
  • 3rd floor: Offices, on-site accommodation, panoramic terrace

Sustainable development

  • Mixed concrete and steel construction. Elements prefabricated in workshop.
  • Connection to district heating system.
  • Reinforced exterior insulation: the heat loss coefficient of the opaque walls and joinery work is on average 50% lower than standard. Thermal inertia is guaranteed by reinforced concrete slabs and the core.
  • Thermal break joinery fittings and high-performance glass. 1/3 of the windows can be opened for summer comfort.
  • Rainwater management: optimisation of absorption zones, retention and re-use of rainwater.
  • Use of certified materials.
  • Dual-flow, heat-recovery ventilation systems.
  • The fresh air is preheated by a ground-coupled heat exchanger.
  • A set of photovoltaic panels is installed on the roof.
  • A performance monitoring system has been implemented.

Together, these technical choices allow for energy consumption in line with French regulation RT 2005 and beyond the requirements for a low-energy house. L’Arbrisseau neighbourhood centre has primary energy consumption of 48.68 kWh/m2/year of primary energy, or primary energy consumption = standard consumption – 58.4%.


See also:

.

Community Centre by
Dierendonck Blancke
Community Centre
by Adamo Faiden
Stephen Lawrence Centre
by Adjaye Associates