Employment Academy by Peter Barber Architects

London studio Peter Barber Architects has added an L-shaped wing to an Arts & Crafts-style building in south-east London to create an advice and training centre for unemployed people (+ slideshow).

Employment Academy by Peter Barber Architects

The new two-storey brick structure extends from the rear of the early twentieth-century offices of the Poor Law Guardians of Southwark, forming a quadrangle of new and old buildings around a paved courtyard.

Employment Academy by Peter Barber Architects

Peter Barber Architects specified a sandy coloured brickwork for the construction of the new wing, setting it apart from the red brick and stone facades that have been restored as part of the renovation.

Employment Academy by Peter Barber Architects

To complement the turrets and other decorative elements of the Arts & Crafts architecture, the studio added a three-storey periscope-shaped tower to the north-east corner of the complex.

Employment Academy by Peter Barber Architects

There’s also a semi-circular wall recess with a half-dome roof, known as an exedra, framing one end of the central courtyard.

Employment Academy by Peter Barber Architects

Balconies and doorways reveal the thickness of the new walls. Meanwhile, windows on some of the existing facades have been relocated, made visible by the mixture of new and aged bricks.

Employment Academy by Peter Barber Architects

The architects carried out a full renovation of the old offices, which now accommodate the administration facilities of the employment agency, while the new buildings provide the training centre.

Employment Academy by Peter Barber Architects

A community cafe is positioned along the eastern facade and can be accessed directly from the adjacent Havil Street.

Employment Academy by Peter Barber Architects

Peter Barber Architects also recently completed another community building in London – a centre for drug and alcohol rehabilitation with a cantilevered upper storey. See more architecture by Peter Barber Architects »

Employment Academy by Peter Barber Architects

Other community buildings built from brick include an open-air complex in rural Bangladesh and a hospice with gabled roof profiles in London. See more brick buildings »

Employment Academy by Peter Barber Architects

Photography is by Morley von Sternberg.

Read on for more information from Peter Barber Architects:


Employment Academy

The Employment Academy is a state of the art training and advice centre in Southwark. It is set up to offer skills training and support services for long term workless people with the intention of helping them back into sustainable employment.

Employment Academy by Peter Barber Architects
Ground floor plan – click for larger image

In 2009 PBA were approached by the charity Thames Reach to make a proposal for the refurbishment and substantial extension of ET Hall’s magnificent late Arts & Craft Poor Law Guardian’s building in Camberwell, south-east London.

Employment Academy by Peter Barber Architects
First floor plan – click for larger image

Barber’s scheme is laid out around a delightful courtyard formed on two sides by a new L shaped training wing. Administration offices and a community café within the existing building form the remaining sides of the courtyard. The courtyard is conceived as the social heart of the project.

Employment Academy by Peter Barber Architects
Second floor plan – click for larger image

New buildings are built in a rustic brick in a manner which might be called picturesque. Thick walls facing the courtyard incorporate a dramatic inset terrace, window seats and a south-facing domed exedra.

Employment Academy by Peter Barber Architects
Third floor plan – click for larger image

Existing facades are handled as a complex patchwork of new and reclaimed brick, of new windows cut in and old ones bricked up.

Employment Academy by Peter Barber Architects
Long section – click for larger image

ET Hall’s treatment of the eastern wing of his building is pretty quirky, all turrets and mini towers… so Barber’s scheme adds one extra in the form of a tasty little tower with an extraordinary brick vaulted roof.

Employment Academy by Peter Barber Architects
Cross section – click for larger image

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Hannibal Road Gardens by Peter Barber Architects

This terrace of eight houses by Peter Barber Architects is clad with timber shingles to match the neighbouring fences and sheds of a housing estate in east London (+ slideshow).

Hannibal Road by Peter Barber

“The building sits at the rear of a 1960s council estate, where there are little rear gardens, rickety sheds and a patchwork of wooden fences,” Peter Barber told Dezeen. “Our building shares a similar aesthetic.”

Hannibal Road by Peter Barber

The timber shingles also create an analogous pattern and texture to the brick walls of the surrounding residences, which face onto the same community garden as the new houses.

Hannibal Road by Peter Barber

Each house has at least two small terraces, whether on the roof or at ground level, and Barber hopes over time these will “get planted and personalised by the people that live there”.

Hannibal Road by Peter Barber

The largest residence has seven bedrooms, while one has six and the others have either three or four.

Hannibal Road by Peter Barber

Half of the houses will be allocated to social housing tenants, while the other half will be sold.

Hannibal Road by Peter Barber

Isometric diagram – click above for larger image

Other housing projects on Dezeen by Peter Barber Architects include 25 new houses elsewhere in east London and a new urban quarter in west London.

Hannibal Road by Peter Barber

Site plan – click above for larger image

See more projects by Peter Barber Architects »

Hannibal Road by Peter Barber

Floor plans – click above for larger image

Photography is by Morley von Sternberg

Here’s a few details from Peter Barber Architects:


Hannibal Road Gardens/Beveridge Mews

Hannibal Road Gardens is a social housing project set around a community garden in Stepney.

The proposal replaces a problematic strip of garages and creates a fourth side to a square within an existing housing estate with 3 slab blocks forming the other sides.

Hannibal Road by Peter Barber

Typical ground floor plan – click above for larger image

The newly landscaped and densely planted community garden created in the centre of the square will be overlooked by a delightful new terrace of eight contemporary family houses.

The new row of houses is conceived as a continuation of the timber garden fences of the existing housing blocks, being constructed from timber and configured as a series of stepped and notched south east facing garden terraces.

Hannibal Road by Peter Barber

Typical first floor plan – click above for larger image

The accommodation is predominantly made up of large family houses (3, 4, 6 bedrooms). These will be 100% affordable, 50% of which are to be socially rented.

Hannibal Road by Peter Barber

Typical second floor plan – click above for larger image

Key features:

» High density, large houses created on a difficult, single-aspect site;
» Innovative notched terrace typology, creating a variety of amenity spaces and outlooks;
» All courtyard houses have their own front door and a minimum of two large courtyards / roof terraces;
» Great example of collaborative approach to planning, working closely with Tower Hamlets Planners and Highways Officers.

Hannibal Road by Peter Barber

Typical roof plan – click above for larger image

Client: Southern Housing Group
Contract Value: c£1.5 million
London Borough of Tower Hamlets

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by Peter Barber Architects
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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

Click above for larger image

Click above for larger image

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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Fleet Street Hill by Peter Barber Architects

Fleet Street Hill by Peter Barber Architects

Peter Barber Architects have produced these drawings as part of a planning application for 25 terraced family houses in London’s East End.

Fleet Street Hill by Peter Barber Architects

The layout of the proposed houses on Fleet Street Hill across 3-4 storeys allows each to have its own ground floor courtyard, as well as accessible roof terraces.

Fleet Street Hill by Peter Barber Architects

It is intended for each house to have its own street level front door, facing onto a new tree-lined public square.

Fleet Street Hill by Peter Barber Architects

Here are some more details from the architects:


Fleet Street Hill, Peter Barber Architects

BD Housing Architect of the year Peter Barber Architects have submitted a planning application for a delightful new tree lined public square of large terraced houses between Brick Lane and Shoreditch in the East End of London.

Fleet Street Hill by Peter Barber Architects

The scheme employs the practice’s trademark terrace/courtyard hybrid housing typology so that every home has its own street edge front door and good sized outside space in a ground floor courtyard and inset roof terraces.

Arcaded frontages echo the industrial vernacular of Bishopsgate Goods Yard while defining an informal terrace area at the edge of the square for the use of each family.

Fleet Street Hill by Peter Barber Architects

For the most part buildings alternate between three and four stories. The square is entered through two intimately scaled mews streets with steps cascading into the square from the adjacent railway bridge.

Fleet Street Hill by Peter Barber Architects

Click above for larger image

A pencil thin tower is located on a prominent corner on the axis of Pedley Street alongside the entrance to the square.

“I think it’s brilliant that it will give local people a lovely new public square and community centre, and fantastic that 25 large families with children will be able to remain in this very desirable central location immediately next to the park, in generous size houses rather than flats.”
Peter Barber, Director

Fleet Street Hill by Peter Barber Architects

Click above for larger image


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