School gatehouse built on a strict budget by Jonathan Tuckey Design

British studio Jonathan Tuckey Design worked with a small team and a tight budget to build this timber-lined gatehouse for a west London primary school.

School gatehouse built on a strict budget by Jonathan Tuckey Design

The new gabled structure provides an activities centre and crèche at the entrance to Wilberforce Primary School in Westminster and is the first of two new buildings by Jonathan Tuckey Design.

School gatehouse built on a strict budget by Jonathan Tuckey Design

Project architect Nic Howett subsumed the roles of quantity surveyor and project manager to keep costs down, working only with a local builder and a small team of engineers to construct the single-storey building.

School gatehouse built on a strict budget by Jonathan Tuckey Design

“The project was coordinated by ourselves, proving that good education buildings can be built for little money without the need for bureaucratic processes, framework agreements and multiple consultants,” Howett told Dezeen.

“All that is really needed are designers with a good level of care and sensitivity to design,” he added. “This could be a model for the way small-scale education work is procured in the future.”

School gatehouse built on a strict budget by Jonathan Tuckey Design

Built around a simple timber frame, the exterior of the building is clad with corrugated fibre-cement panels, while walls and ceilings inside feature a continuous plywood surface.

A long rear wall provides a pin-up area where pupils can show off their work. This sits opposite a wall of glazing that opens the space out to a narrow playground.

School gatehouse built on a strict budget by Jonathan Tuckey Design

Three skylights puncture the roof to bring in both daylight and ventilation, contrasting with the building’s predecessor, which Howett says was a dark portakabin that needed artificial lighting all year around. “It really was quite a depressing space for kids to be in,” he explained.

Exploded axonometric diagram of School gatehouse built on a strict budget by Jonathan Tuckey Design
Exploded axonometric diagram – click for larger image

For the next stage of the project, the architects will give the school a new entrance building and community centre.

Interior photography is by Dirk Lindner.

Here’s a project description from Jonathan Tuckey Design:


A new after-school activities centre and crèche for a City of Westminster primary school in West London.

Envisioned as a new gate-house for the school this project was designed with two ambitions in mind: to provide the school with much-needed additional space and to help the school engage with the wider community.

Floor plan of School gatehouse built on a strict budget by Jonathan Tuckey Design
Floor plan – click for larger image

The first phase of the project, which includes an activities centre and crèche, is designed to inspire young minds through the provision of generous natural light combined with intriguing volumes and shapes throughout.

An entire wall is given over to displaying pupils’ work; another is fully glazed and, as a sliding wall, allows learning and play to take place both inside and out. Materials were selected to deliver a completed building for £1600/m2. Profile sheeting was used externally whilst inside a plywood interior that needed little finishing was fitted. Both were detailed to give these materials a finely finished appearance. The materials ground the Annexe firmly in the context of the site whilst providing Wilberforce Primary with a durable building.

Section of School gatehouse built on a strict budget by Jonathan Tuckey Design
Section – click for larger image

“I was impressed by the extensive research they had done. They clearly understood the needs of the staff and users of the building, and this was reflected in the design which was not only fit for purpose, but also beautiful” – Angela Piddock, Wilberforce Primary Headteacher.

Elevation of School gatehouse built on a strict budget by Jonathan Tuckey Design
Elevation – click for larger image

Sustainability

The building is primarily timber, consisting of a timber frame and clad internally with FSC and PEFC certified plywood from sustainable sources. Externally the building is clad in Marley Eternit fibre cement profile sheeting, which achieves an A+ rating in the BRE Green Guide. The resulting lightweight structure meant that minimum foundations were required. Forbo Marmoleum flooring was used which achieves a Cradle-to-Cradle silver certificate. Openable roof lights in the building allow for all spaces to be naturally lit and ventilated.

Long elevation of School gatehouse built on a strict budget by Jonathan Tuckey Design
Long elevation – click for larger image

The second stage is to complete the new entrance building to the site which houses a community centre that will give the school a welcome and revitalised presence on the street. This work is on going.

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Jonathan Tuckey Design renovates a mews house for an ex-submariner

Latticed wooden screens form balustrades for a red pigmented concrete staircase inside this renovated mews house in west London by British studio Jonathan Tuckey Design.

Submariners House by Jonathan Tuckey Design

Named Submariner’s House, the three-storey residence was redesigned by Jonathan Tuckey Design for a resident who used to work on a submarine. This client asked for a home that maximises space and includes a new basement and roof terrace.

Submariners House by Jonathan Tuckey Design

The compact proportions of the building led to a simple layout with one main room on each floor and a focal staircase that runs along one wall.

Submariners House by Jonathan Tuckey Design

“Our ambition was to provide a series of new domestic spaces that were pulled together as a whole by a new staircase and voids between the different levels to create a psychologically expanded space,” said project architect Ryuta Hirayama.

Submariners House by Jonathan Tuckey Design

Red pigment was added to concrete to give a warm colour to the staircase. It is fronted by screens made from timber slats, which are white washed so that they appear bleached and have diagonal braces for handrails.

Submariners House by Jonathan Tuckey Design

On the ground floor, an illuminated glass box sits at the end of the staircase to allow light to reach a shower room in the basement.

Submariners House by Jonathan Tuckey Design

The rest of the newly excavated basement is used as a games room. Felt-lined walls slide back to reveal shelves and cupboards, and the room can also be partitioned to create a small guest bedroom.

Submariners House by Jonathan Tuckey Design

More built-in cupboards line the walls of a ground-floor kitchen and dining room, while old stable doors open the room out to the quiet street.

Submariners House by Jonathan Tuckey Design

The living room occupies the first floor and the client’s bedroom can be found on the storey above. There’s also an en suite bathroom including a limestone bath and a skylight with adjustable opacity.

Submariners House by Jonathan Tuckey Design

Photography is by Dirk Lindner.

Here’s a project description from Jonathan Tuckey Design:


Submariner’s House

Reconstruction of a mews house in the conservation area of St Luke’s Mews, west London.

Submariners House by Jonathan Tuckey Design

Brief

Full refurbishment of a three storey mews house and construction of a new basement for a private client who is an ex-submariner. The house consists of a kitchen/dining room on the ground floor, living room on the 1st floor,bedroom/bathroom on the 2nd floor and media room in the basement which can also be used as a guest bedroom.

Submariners House by Jonathan Tuckey Design

This late Victorian mews house is located in a conservation area allowing us only minor alteration works to the external facade. Briefed to maximise both the living and storage space in this small mews house, our ambition was to provide a series of new domestic spaces that were pulled together as a whole by a new staircase and voids between the different levels to create a psychologically expanded space.

Submariners House by Jonathan Tuckey Design

Concrete stairs and screen

The staircase is made from red pigmented concrete and is veiled in a delicate screen of whitened timber slats that acts as both balustrade and room divider. In places this screen parts to reveal views through the house and, together with the strategically positioned new windows, helps to join the different levels and spaces of the house into one. Polished plaster walls also tie the spaces together and draw light deep in to the building.

Submariners House by Jonathan Tuckey Design
Concept diagram – click for larger image

Basement

A newly excavated basement allowed for the addition of a new media room and guest accommodation and a sequence of felt-lined panels and cupboards allow this space to accommodate its mix of functions.

Submariners House by Jonathan Tuckey Design
Floor plans – click for larger image

Ground floor

The main entrance garage door can be opened out a full 180 degrees and with an integrated folding table can create a dining room extended into the street. A glass box by the entrance door lets natural light into the basement shower room. The entire polished plaster wall alongside the kitchen/dining room conceals a cupboard with black MDF shelves.

Submariners House by Jonathan Tuckey Design
Cross section – click for larger image

First floor

Whitened timber slats and bookshelves create spacious open living room space.

Submariners House by Jonathan Tuckey Design
Front elevation – click for larger image

Second floor

Skylight on the pitched bathroom roof allows natural light to flood into the bedroom. A control on the skylight allows the client to adjust the opacity of the glass while looking up at the sky from the bathtub. Bathtub is made of limestone and the floor is tiled with natural cement tiles.

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Frame House by Jonathan Tuckey Design

British studio Jonathan Tuckey Design has added skeletal partitions and skylights to bring more light into this renovated west London mews house.

Frame House by Jonathan Tuckey Design

Jonathan Tuckey Design renovated the Grade II-listed building for a private client and his dog, creating a two-storey home with a combined living and dining room on the first floor.

Frame House by Jonathan Tuckey Design

The planning authorities were reluctant to let the architects design an open-plan layout for the space, so they instead added see-through stud walls that follow the exact footprint of the original interior.

Frame House by Jonathan Tuckey Design

“We negotiated a difficult planning process in order to achieve this aesthetic in the Frame House,” architect Nic Howett told Dezeen. “The open plan with frame walls allowed light to flood deep into the plan.”

Frame House by Jonathan Tuckey Design

Five skylights bring light to different parts of the space. “A large roof light over the stairs allowed light to flood down to the ground floor,” said Howett.

Frame House by Jonathan Tuckey Design

Walls present a mixture of exposed brickwork and timber panelling, while the kitchen is finished in stainless steel and there’s also a reading corner.

Frame House by Jonathan Tuckey Design

Entrances lead into the house on both storeys. The downstairs entrance opens into a red-painted workshop and garage, used by the client to store his motorbikes.

Frame House by Jonathan Tuckey Design

The master bedroom is positioned alongside, while storage spaces line the edges of the corridor, and a bathroom and wet room are tucked away behind.

Frame House by Jonathan Tuckey Design

A birch plywood staircase connects the two floors.

Frame House by Jonathan Tuckey Design

This year Jonathan Tuckey Design also converted a historic chapel in Wiltshire, England, into a house with a blackened-timber extension conceived as the building’s shadow.

Photography is by Ioana Marinescu.

Here’s a short description from the architects:


Frame House

The reconstruction of a Grade II listed mews house in Holland Park, West London.

Beyond the refurbished historic exterior an entry hallway with a red-pigmented concrete floor acts as both a workshop and display case for our client’s collection of vintage motorbikes, which can be seen from within the house through a large glazed partition.

Frame House by Jonathan Tuckey Design

The ground floor also houses the master bedroom and bathroom. Opposite the hallway a birch-ply staircase is inserted into a double-height space which is lined with black MDF.

Frame House by Jonathan Tuckey Design

On the first floor a framework of timber studs is located where the original walls stood, creating an open, but layered kitchen and living space. The original roof structure is visible above this framework and new skylights with timber cowls bring in natural light.

Frame House by Jonathan Tuckey Design

A crisp, stainless steel kitchen contrasts with the exposed brick walls and the study is lined in Douglas Fir panelling. Skilled craftsmanship elevates the modest palette of materials to create a characterful modern home.

Frame House by Jonathan Tuckey Design
Site plan – click for larger image
Frame House by Jonathan Tuckey Design
Ground floor plan – click for larger image
Frame House by Jonathan Tuckey Design
First floor plan – click for larger image
Frame House by Jonathan Tuckey Design
Roof plan – click for larger image
Frame House by Jonathan Tuckey Design
Section – click for larger image

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Shadow House by Jonathan Tuckey Design

London studio Jonathan Tuckey Design has converted a historic chapel in Wiltshire, England, into a house with a blackened-timber extension conceived as the building’s shadow.

Shadow House by Jonathan Tuckey Design
Photograph by James Brittain

The architects were only permitted to build an extension that would be invisible from the street. “The form was generated by the parameters of building something as big as possible within the chapel’s shadow, so that led to the consideration of materials reminiscent of a shadow,” Jonathan Tuckey told Dezeen.

Shadow House by Jonathan Tuckey Design
Photograph by James Brittain

The roof and every wall of the extension is clad in bitumen-stained larch, with flush detailing around the edges of the gable and chimney. It is built over a series of reconstructed dry-stone walls.

Shadow House by Jonathan Tuckey Design
Photograph by James Brittain

“The clients, the planners and us were all keen to create something different to the original building, rather than mimic it,” said Tuckey.

Shadow House by Jonathan Tuckey Design
Photograph by James Brittain

All four of the house’s bedrooms are contained inside the new structure, while the former vestry of the chapel functions as a library and the large hall is converted into an open-plan kitchen and living room with a mezzanine gallery above.

Shadow House by Jonathan Tuckey Design
Photograph by James Brittain

A transparent glass corridor links the extension with the two adjoining buildings of the chapel and can be opened out to the garden in warmer weather.

Shadow House by Jonathan Tuckey Design
Photograph by James Brittain

Other church conversions we’ve featured on Dezeen include a bookstore inside a former Dominican church in Holland and a church converted into an auditorium in Spain.

Shadow House by Jonathan Tuckey Design
Photograph by James Brittain

See more buildings clad with blackened wood, including a weekend house in Japan.

Shadow House by Jonathan Tuckey Design
Photograph by James Brittain

Here’s a short project description from the architect:


Shadow House – Transformation of a Grade 2* listed chapel in Wiltshire into a family home

Our clients were intent on preserving the historic character of this elegant historic chapel but needed to adapt the building to accommodate the needs of their young family and connect it to the garden at the rear of the site.

Shadow House by Jonathan Tuckey Design
Site overview diagram – click for larger image

Complementing the existing chapel’s form and scale the new extension sits on re-built dry stone walls in the garden and is unseen from the street. It is clad in blackened timber, echoing the vernacular tabernacle churches of the West Country; a quiet shadow of the original building.

A glazed transparent passage, which can be opened entirely in warmer weather, links the extension back to the chapel where the mid-19th century spaces have been refurbished.

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Jonathan Tuckey Design
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