The Workshop offices by Guy Hollaway Architects feature a tubular steel slide

UK-based Guy Hollaway Architects has become the latest firm to install a slide inside an office building with this renovation for online events guide View London (+ slideshow).

The Workshop offices with a slide through the centre by Guy Holloway

Guy Hollaway Architects overhauled a former nightclub in Kent, England, to create the office block and installed the slide between View London‘s two floors at the top of the building.

The Workshop offices with a slide through the centre by Guy Holloway

Made from stainless steel, the tubular slide slots comfortably between the two levels and is big enough to fit just one person at a time.

The Workshop offices with a slide through the centre by Guy Holloway

Guy Hollaway told Dezeen the slide was his client’s suggestion. “The client is very forward thinking and wanted to create a relaxed, fun working environment,” he said.

The Workshop offices with a slide through the centre by Guy Holloway

The architects also renovated the other three floors of the building. The ground floor, referred to as the Factory Room, functions as an incubator for new businesses starting up, while the remaining levels accommodate flexible office spaces and meeting rooms.

The Workshop offices with a slide through the centre by Guy Holloway

The building’s historic facade was retained and painted black, contrasting with a new undulating glass wall that sits alongside.

The Workshop offices with a slide through the centre by Guy Holloway

“Whilst the building has a traditional facade, the client wanted people to know that behind it is a modern working building. The surrounding glass gives these clues,” Hollaway explained.

The Workshop offices with a slide through the centre by Guy Holloway

“The undulating glass creates a further contrasting facade and allowed us to set the glazing behind the historical facade, this making it look like it is floating off the front,” he added.

The Workshop offices with a slide through the centre by Guy Holloway

The fourth floor, which was added during the renovation, is set back from the facade, creating a south-facing balcony looking out towards the sea.

The Workshop offices with a slide through the centre by Guy Holloway

Here’s a project description from Guy Hollaway Architects:


The Workshop

The concept behind ‘The Workshop’ is to provide a flexible workspace with a lively working environment. The upper floors are connected by an industrial slide which provides quick circulation between the floors. These floors are occupied by View London, Londoner’s guide to London. The other floors provide flexible office space and meeting rooms.

The Workshop offices with a slide through the centre by Guy Holloway

The ground ‘Factory Floor’, is an incubator space, where space can be rented by fledgling businesses, providing aid to local economy, adding to Folkstone’s Creative Quarter.

The Workshop offices with a slide through the centre by Guy Holloway

The former night-club now houses five floors of flexible office space and commercial space on the ground floor called ‘the Factory Floor’. The new design retains the historic façade as it was key for planners to maintain the existing facade within the conversation area. However, it was also important for the client to create a new building statement hence the boldness of the black facade.

The Workshop offices by Guy Hollaway Architects feature a tubular steel slide

The design was complex to build, with the facade having to be suspended during construction to insert the surrounding contemporary glass facade whose curving undulations feed into the historical original facade, where old meets new. This organic glazed element elegantly filters light into the internal office spaces.

The Workshop offices with a slide through the centre by Guy Holloway

The design features an additional upper floor, which is set back from the existing facade line. This creates a south facing external balcony space, which uses the existing façade as a balustrade giving a view over the town and towards the English Channel.

Ground floor plan of The Workshop offices with a slide through the centre by Guy Holloway
Ground floor plan – click for larger image
First floor plan of The Workshop offices with a slide through the centre by Guy Holloway
First floor plan – click for larger image
Second floor plan of The Workshop offices with a slide through the centre by Guy Holloway
Second floor plan – click for larger image
Third floor plan of The Workshop offices with a slide through the centre by Guy Holloway
Third floor plan – click for larger image
Fourth floor plan of The Workshop offices with a slide through the centre by Guy Holloway
Fourth floor plan – click for larger image
Roof plan of The Workshop offices with a slide through the centre by Guy Holloway
Roof plan – click for larger image
Section of The Workshop offices with a slide through the centre by Guy Holloway
Section – click for larger image
Street elevation of The Workshop offices with a slide through the centre by Guy Holloway
Street elevation – click for larger image
Rear elevation of The Workshop offices with a slide through the centre by Guy Holloway
Rear elevation – click for larger image

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Architects feature a tubular steel slide
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Rocksalt by Guy Hollaway Architects

Rocksalt by Guy Holloway Architects

Charred larch clads the curved walls of a seafood restaurant that projects towards the harbour in Folkestone, England.

Rocksalt by Guy Holloway Architects

Rocksalt Restaurant by British studio Guy Hollaway Architects sits atop a new sea wall beside a historic brick viaduct and is shielded from stray boats by a screen of timber columns.

Rocksalt by Guy Holloway Architects

A cantilevered balcony with a glass balustrade wraps around the sea-facing facade of the restaurant, sheltered by a canopy.

Rocksalt by Guy Holloway Architects

The building is raised on a stepped slate plinth to protect it from flooding.

Rocksalt by Guy Holloway Architects

Locally caught fish will be served inside the restaurant, where lamps designed to look like lobster cages hang above circular tables and leather seating booths.

Rocksalt by Guy Holloway Architects

This is the first completed building from architect Terry Farrell‘s seafront masterplan.

Rocksalt by Guy Holloway Architects

Another popular seafront restaurant on Dezeen is located in a remote forested gorge in southern Chinasee all our stories about restaurants here.

Rocksalt by Guy Holloway Architects

Photography is by Paul Freeman.

Here are some more details from the architects:


Rocksalt Seafood Restaurant Folkestone Harbour, Kent

Rocksalt Restaurant and Bar is a newly built destination restaurant in Folkestone Harbour and is the first restaurant venture for executive chef Mark Sargeant, former head chef at Gordon Ramsay’s Claridge’s.

Won at national competition by Guy Hollaway Architects, it is the first complete building to be realized as part of Sir Terry Farrell’s Folkestone masterplan. The completed restaurant and bar forms a crucial milestone in the regeneration of Folkestone’s ‘Old Town’ and harbour, serving to reconnect visitors and the population of the coastal town with the working harbour and seafront. The restaurant is located on Folkestone’s harbour edge, adjacent to its working slipway where local fishermen unload their catch, delivering fresh fish to the restaurant daily. It is hoped that the project will catalyse the ‘Padstow effect’.

Rocksalt by Guy Holloway Architects

Perched in the corner of the tidal harbour between a listed brick viaduct and cobbled street, the restaurant faces the former fish market. Folkestone boasts a small fishing fleet who off-load catches on to the slipway directly adjacent to the restaurant. The building sits on a new curved sea wall and borrows back land to form a wine cellar. Timber dolphin piles protect the building from stray boats.

On approach, the building presents itself from under a brick arch and then peels away from the cobbled street to reveal the harbour. Three curved walls, decreasing in height are clad in shot blasted black larch to echo the surrounding context. A slate plinth raises the building from the flood risk zone and elevates the views. Angled reveals on picture windows allow sight into the kitchen, reflecting the working nature of the fish market, and offer views back to the street. The slate steps leading to the entrance merge into public bench seating at the top of the jetty facing out to sea.

Rocksalt by Guy Holloway Architects

At ground floor level, the restaurant has 86 covers and the opportunity for a private dining room. Large glass sliding doors allow uninterrupted panoramic views of fishing boats at high tide and sandy shingle flats at low tide. From the restaurant’s interior a cantilevered balcony, with a glass balustrade and curved soffit creates an extension of the internal dining area.

Liz Jeanes, interior designer at Guy Hollaway Architects led the interior scheme, taking strong influences from the immediate context. The interior colours emulate colours of the sea and sky – rising from dark, aquatic greens and dark tones of timber at ground floor; rising to a lighter palette of blues, greys and whites, contrasting with warmer shades of iroko on the first floor bar and terrace. A marble top to the ground floor bar and marble floor tiles show influences from traditional fishmonger interiors, whilst the main restaurant uses herringbone laid oak parquet flooring to emulate the scales of a fish.

Rocksalt by Guy Holloway Architects

Tall backed leather booth seats sit beneath the low curved ceiling, enveloping diners into the restaurant. The curved ceiling then extends from the restaurant back wall, opening out to the sea and is designed to reflect the smooth curved form of a fish’s side. Dark stained larch panelling at ground floor level echo the exterior envelope treatment, and including concealed acoustic insulation between slats within the busy restaurant.

Hidden LED strips wash light across ceilings and down walls, providing a subtle radiance to the interior spaces. Feature pendants are reminiscent of lobster pots and accentuate the bar and central table on the ground floor.

Rocksalt by Guy Holloway Architects

The building directly engages with the harbour – at ground floor, three large sliding doors blur inside and outside, and at first floor large sliding doors open fully to merge the bar and external terrace seamlessly. Beyond the pebble filled roof elevated views of the harbour and to the English Channel beyond are offered.

The completed building sees its concept realised by re-engaging visitors and local residents alike with Folkestone’s rich coastal heritage, serving as a catalyst to revitalise the local area.

Client: Folkestone Harbour Company
Date: June 2010 – June 2011
Contract Value: £2.3m


See also:

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Pollen Street Social
by Neri&Hu (NHDRO)
Tree Restaurant by
Koichi Takada Architects
Living Lab by Ab Rogers
for Pizza Express