Liverpool warehouse converted into offices by Snook Architects

British studio Snook Architects used industrial materials, reclaimed furniture and colourful storage units to transform a 550-square-metre loft in Liverpool into an office for creative agency Uniform (+ slideshow).

Liverpool warehouse converted into creative offices by Snook Architects

Snook Architects was tasked with creating a space that combined big, flexible workspaces, meeting areas, private booths, model making spaces, prototyping and electronics workshops, a photography studio, and a huge kitchen and refectory where the team can eat together.

Liverpool warehouse converted into creative offices by Snook Architects

The space was previously used as a storage area for shops that occupy the lower floors of the building.

Liverpool warehouse converted into creative offices by Snook Architects

“As relatively basic storage space the floor was more akin to simple warehouse than office,” architect Neil Dawson told Dezeen. “A series of roof lanterns lit the deep floor plan but produced blinding light during sunnier days.”

Liverpool warehouse converted into creative offices by Snook Architects

In its new state, the space features a series of monochrome spaces that are dotted with splashes of colour to highlight the eclectic array of clients and services the company offers. To counteract the lighting issue, the team inserted louvres that can be closed when the sun is too bright.

Liverpool warehouse converted into creative offices by Snook Architects

The space uses utilitarian materials such as chipboard and plywood. “This was to show how the with specific context the most mundane of material can be transformed into something special,” said Dawson.

Liverpool warehouse converted into creative offices by Snook Architects

The majority of the furniture was taken from the client’s old offices, with the addition of recycled chairs in the canteen.

Liverpool warehouse converted into creative offices by Snook Architects

To satisfy the brief, the team created three zones; the main open-plan office, a service zone replete with model space, photography and meeting areas and a social area for the canteen and games room.

Liverpool warehouse converted into creative offices by Snook Architects

A colourful storage wall in the reception area acts as an exhibition area, where new customers can see what clients the team at Uniform are currently working with.

Liverpool warehouse converted into creative offices by Snook Architects

“The wall itself is an active device. Panels can be clipped on and off as displays require giving an emphasis towards the office or the reception,” said Dawson. “Panels can be left off entirely to give visitors an enticing view of the work being undertaken in the studio beyond.”

Liverpool warehouse converted into creative offices by Snook Architects

The team also installed was a split-flap display behind reception. Based on the old messaging boards in train stations, this is connected to the internet to give up-to-date information on weather, date, time and financial reports from the company.

Liverpool warehouse converted into creative offices by Snook Architects

“The idea is to remind potential clients of the value of alternative thought and presentation within the realm of digital media,” added the architect.

Liverpool warehouse converted into creative offices by Snook Architects

Photography is by Andy Haslam.

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offices by Snook Architects
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Loft MM by C.T. Architects designed as an accessible home for a wheelchair user

This apartment conversion in Bilzen, Belgium, by C.T. Architects is designed as a stylish home for a wheelchair user and features practical storage including shelves built into either end of an angular dining table.

Loft MM by C.T. Architects designed as an accessible home for a wheelchair user

Local office C.T. Architects adapted a space which was previously used as storage for an apartment block into a compact home that incorporates several accessible features.

Loft MM by C.T. Architects designed as an accessible home for a wheelchair user

Architect Nick Ceulemans wanted to create a home “that does not look at all like a dwelling for a physically challenged person.” Ceulemans said: “In fact, while many of the design solutions were inspired by necessity, they would all be welcome in any urban small loft.”

Loft MM by C.T. Architects designed as an accessible home for a wheelchair user

The first thing to be done was to adapt the building’s main entrance by adding a ramp to the owner’s front door and provide a new communal entrance to the other flats.

Loft MM by C.T. Architects designed as an accessible home for a wheelchair user

Inside the small apartment, a bright living and dining area is connected to the bedroom by a corridor that is wide enough to comfortably accommodate a wheelchair.

Loft MM by C.T. Architects designed as an accessible home for a wheelchair user

Wet areas and storage spaces are grouped together to free up as much floor space as possible inside the 80 square-metre apartment, which also includes a small terrace accessed through sliding glass doors from the bedroom.

Loft MM by C.T. Architects designed as an accessible home for a wheelchair user

As well as the shelving incorporated into the dining table, the headboard of the bed functions as a desk with integrated storage.

Loft MM by C.T. Architects designed as an accessible home for a wheelchair user

A specially designed hybrid lighting fixture and electrical hub on the desk in the bedroom features a rotating beam that can direct light towards the work surface or the bed and provides convenient charging points.

Loft MM by C.T. Architects designed as an accessible home for a wheelchair user

Materials and finishes used throughout the interior were chosen to enhance the apartment’s bright and relaxed feel, with the textured floors and doors adding warmth and tactility.

Loft MM by C.T. Architects designed as an accessible home for a wheelchair user

“A sense of unity and calm is created by using white walls and ceilings combined with rough-sawn oak floors and sliding doors hiding the storage space, bathroom and toilet,” explained the architects.

Loft MM by C.T. Architects designed as an accessible home for a wheelchair user

Electrically height adjustable kitchen units drop down to make the cupboards easier to reach, while the position of a lamp in the living and dining space can be adjusted by swinging it away from the wall.

Loft MM by C.T. Architects designed as an accessible home for a wheelchair user

Photography is by Tim Van de Velde.

Here’s some more information from C.T. Architects:


A home without boundaries

The project includes the conversion of a ground floor apartment, previously used for storage, into an accessible and wheelchair friendly living space for an accident victim. The result is an apartment that does not look at all like a dwelling for a physically challenged person. In fact, while many of the design solutions were inspired by necessity, they would all be welcome in any urban small loft.

Loft MM by C.T. Architects designed as an accessible home for a wheelchair user

To create an accessible residence, C.T. Architects changed the main entrance of the building block to create a ramp to the client’s front door and a new communal entrance for the upstairs neighbours. The apartment itself was transformed completely.

By clustering the wet areas and storage space into two compact volumes, the architect was able to bring natural light into the long and narrow canyon- like layout that is organised into a conventional succession of increasingly private spaces: living room and dining area near the main entrance, a central corridor – at a comfortable width for wheelchair passage – and with an efficient kitchen on one side and the bathroom on the other side, and then the bedroom/study in the rear.

Loft MM by C.T. Architects designed as an accessible home for a wheelchair user

Sliding glass doors lead from the bedroom/study onto a small back terrace. A sense of unity and calm is created by using white walls and ceilings combined with rough-sawn oak floors and sliding doors hiding the storage space, bathroom and toilet. The kitchen designed by C.T. Architects is electrically height-adjustable which provides a wheelchair-bound user with the ability to reach everything easily.

Nick Ceulemans from C.T. Architects also designed key pieces of the furniture to meet the client’s specific needs and preferences and to comply with Belgian disability codes. He designed the dining table with built-in shelves at both ends and a flexible swing-arm wall lamp above this table (also presented at this year’s Salone del Mobile in Milan).

Loft MM by C.T. Architects designed as an accessible home for a wheelchair user

In the bedroom, Nick Ceulemans designed the double-duty bed with a desk at its head, an adjacent wall of bookshelves and a hybrid light fixture/electrical hub that swivels to illuminate both bed and work surface and to provide outlets at a convenient height for the user.

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accessible home for a wheelchair user
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Live Between Buildings by Mateusz Mastalski and Ole Robin Storjohann

Two Denmark architects have designed a concept for narrow apartments that fill tiny gaps between existing buildings.

Mateusz Mastalski and Ole Robin Storjohann’s project Live Between Buildings proposes a series of micro-home apartments for urban living. In the designs, the tiny living quarters are proposed in playful shapes including an X, an O, a tree, a cloud, a speech bubble and a space invader.

Live Between Buildings by Mateusz Mastalski and Ole Robin Storjohann
Diagram – Waska 4, Wroclaw, Poland

The designers have illustrated, in a series of diagrams, how their concept could work in highly dense cities such as New York, Tokyo, Amsterdam, Helsinki and London.

Live Between Buildings by Mateusz Mastalski and Ole Robin Storjohann
Diagram – 153 West 35th street, New York, USA

Mastalski and Storjohann’s concept recently won the annual New Vision of the Loft 2 design award, organised by roof window manufacturer Fakro. The competition asked designers to develop concepts for urban lofts spaces that would be functional, space-saving, energy-efficient and full of natural light. All entries had to include Fakro products, as well as others.

Live Between Buildings by Mateusz Mastalski and Ole Robin Storjohann
Diagram – Kanaalstraat 2, Amsterdam, Netherlands

Fakro has said that the winning infill-loft dwellings could be realised entirely out of roof windows. “The possibility of shapes is endless,” the firm added.

Live Between Buildings by Mateusz Mastalski and Ole Robin Storjohann
Diagram – Shibuya-ku, Yoyogi, Tokyo-to, Japan

In related news, the Department for Communities and Local Government (DCLG) in the UK published a consultation about minimum space standards for new build homes.

Other micro-homes we’ve previously featured include Renzo Piano’s tiny wooden cabin at the Vitra Campus for one inhabitant and a mini prefabricated guest house that gets delivered by helicopter.

See more micro-homes »

Live Between Buildings by Mateusz Mastalski and Ole Robin Storjohann
Diagram – Chelsea Gardens, London

Images are by Mateusz Mastalski and Ole Robin Storjohann.

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Mastalski and Ole Robin Storjohann
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LOT-EK Architecture Firm

Really like the work of LOT-EK, particularly the renovation of the Miller-Jones Studio. My favorite bit is the bedroom storage wall comprised entirely of bent sheet metal office storage units from flat files to lockers to cabinets. As austere as it is playful.


LOT-EK Miller-Jones Studio


LOT-EK Miller-Jones Studio


LOT-EK Miller-Jones Studio