School building by Mitchell Taylor Workshop contrasts pale stone with grey brick

This school building in Bath, England, by local architects Mitchell Taylor Workshop features stone walls recalling the city’s historic architecture, alongside contrasting dark grey brickwork and window surrounds (+ slideshow).

Kingswood School, Bath by Mitchell Taylor Workshop

The design by Mitchell Taylor Workshop was the winning entry in a competition for a humanities building at Kingswood School, to be built on the school’s picturesque Lansdown Road grounds.

Kingswood School, Bath by Mitchell Taylor Workshop

Located within a designated conservation area and World Heritage Site, the materials used for the facility’s exterior had to meet strict planning regulations.

Kingswood School, Bath by Mitchell Taylor Workshop

The use of stone references Bath’s historic buildings and the architects chose to add contrast by introducing a grey brick that resembles slate, a materials that is also part of the area’s architectural heritage.

Kingswood School, Bath by Mitchell Taylor Workshop

“The choice of materials evolved from the desire to create a playful front and back tectonic narrative,” the architects explained. “After the planners had requested that stone be used, we then identified another heavily used material in Bath, slate, and argued that a long dark brick had the quality of a slate block, which they accepted.”

Kingswood School, Bath by Mitchell Taylor Workshop

One of the two-storey building’s facades is angled towards an open grassy area and features gables clad in pale stone, contrasting with the tall grey windows that echo the front of the adjacent Ferens Building, built in 1924.

Kingswood School, Bath by Mitchell Taylor Workshop

“The new design evolved to be a contemporary interpretation of both the Ferens Building and the local context of the world heritage site,” said the architects. “The form and proportion of the roof structure and openings is a response to the rhythm of the Ferens building’s facade, with the tall windows and perforated panels.”

Kingswood School, Bath by Mitchell Taylor Workshop

Grey brick was used to clad the rear portion of the classroom facility, including a large gable end that combines with an angled wall to frame a tall glazed entrance.

Kingswood School, Bath by Mitchell Taylor Workshop

An overhanging canopy on the opposite side of the building covers the main entrance, which leads to a central circulation area used as a conference, exhibition and social space.

Kingswood School, Bath by Mitchell Taylor Workshop

Eight classrooms and three staff rooms are housed over two storeys in a pair of blocks arranged on either side of the circulation and display area.

Kingswood School, Bath by Mitchell Taylor Workshop

The grey window frames that project from the southern facade provide solar shading and incorporate perforated panels covering windows that can be opened to provide ventilation in any weather.

Kingswood School, Bath by Mitchell Taylor Workshop

Pupils in the upper-floor classrooms can look out across the lawn towards the surrounding countryside.

Kingswood School, Bath by Mitchell Taylor Workshop

Photography is by Peter Cook.

Here’s a project description from the architects:


Kingswood School, Bath, England

Mitchell Taylor Workshop were invited by Kingswood School to submit a proposal for a limited competition for the design a new humanities building in May 2012. The site is located on the school’s Lansdown Road grounds in Bath within both the Conservation Area and with a World Heritage designation. The winning scheme was to house eight new classrooms and three departmental resource areas and a flexible circulation space that could be used for exhibiting work and for external academic and conference functions.

Kingswood School, Bath by Mitchell Taylor Workshop

The form and orientation of the building was generated from site constraints in maximising the natural daylight and ventilation into the classroom spaces whilst controlling solar gain. The building is aligned along Fonthill Road to the north-east and is effectively divided into two blocks with the southern elevation orientated to the immediate open space and the extraordinary views beyond. The internal spaces unfold from a large overhang which provides a covered canopy and connects to an internal triangular plan shaped circulation area which allows for the pupils to display and exhibit their work and as breakout and social space.

Kingswood School, Bath by Mitchell Taylor Workshop

Adjacent to the new classroom site is the existing Ferens Building, built in 1924. The new design evolved to be a contemporary interpretation of both the Ferens Building and the language of the heritage buildings of Bath with defined fronts and backs. The form and proportion of the roof structure and openings is a response to the rhythm of Ferens building facade with the tall windows and perforate panels.

Ground floor plan of Kingswood-School,-Bath-by-Mitchell-Taylor-Workshop
Ground floor plan – click for larger image

The choice of materials evolved from the desire to create a playful front and back tectonic narrative. After the planners had requested that stone be used, we then identified another heavily used material in Bath, slate, and argued that a long dark brick had the quality of a slate block which they accepted. The proposal evolved to incorporate the stone on the south with the dark brick on the north façade creating a unique architectural composition.

First floor plan of Kingswood-School,-Bath-by-Mitchell-Taylor-Workshop
First floor plan – click for larger image

Our experience of working with independent schools has brought about an expertise in a variety of building types from libraries, to boarding houses, theatres to classrooms, sports halls to energy centres. The Independent Schools have a strong identity and aspire to reflect this within the built environment. Budgets and time constraints are also well defined but this should not restrict the aspiration to produce interesting and relevant architectural buildings and places.

Section one of Kingswood-School,-Bath-by-Mitchell-Taylor-Workshop
Section one – click for larger image

Mitchell Taylor workshop developed their proposal working very closely with the staff and pupils of the school. The school wanted to occupy their new building at the start of the 2013/14 academic year which meant a design and construction period of little over 12 months. The budget resulted in a construction value of £1,700/sq.m which meant that both the design and construction needed to well considered, co-ordinated and efficient as well as making a positive contribution to the built and academic aspirations of the school.

Section two of Kingswood-School,-Bath-by-Mitchell-Taylor-Workshop
Section two – click for larger image

Gross Internal Floor Area – 632m²
Form of Contract or Procurement Route– JCD ICD 2011
Cconstruction Cost Per m2 – £1640/m2
Architect – Mitchell Taylor Workshop
Client – Kingswood School

Structural Engineer – Mann Williams
M&E Consultant – King Shaw Associates Ltd
QS – Bishopston Stephens
Project Manager – Bishopston Stephens
CDM Coordinator – Anderson FM Consulting Ltd
Approved Building Inspector – Bath & North East Somerset Council
Main Contractor – Beard

The post School building by Mitchell Taylor Workshop
contrasts pale stone with grey brick
appeared first on Dezeen.

Kunsthaus Graz

Construit en 2003 dans la ville de Graz en Autriche lorsque la ville était capitale européenne de la culture, ce musée des arts insolite appelé Kunsthaus Graz est aussi surnommé Friendly Alien par ses auteurs Peter Cook et Colin Fournier. Davantage d’images de ce lieu surprenant sont à découvrir dans la suite.

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The Tower of Droplets by Sir Peter Cook and Gavin Robotham

CRAB by Sir Peter Cook and Gavin Robotham

This algae-producing tower designed by Sir Peter Cook and Gavin Robotham of London studio CRAB came second in the recent Taiwan Tower Conceptual International Competition.

CRAB by Sir Peter Cook and Gavin Robotham

The project, a conceptual design for Taichung in Taiwan, features a tower with a series of steel cages attached that will be covered in algae to produce biofuel.

CRAB by Sir Peter Cook and Gavin Robotham

The competition was won by this design featuring floating observation decks attached to giant helium balloons.

The following information is from the architects:


SIR PETER COOK AND GAVIN ROBOTHAM
WIN 2ND PRIZE IN INTERNATIONAL COMPETITION
FOR TAIWAN TOWER AT TAICHUNG

From a field of 237 entries from 25 countries, London’s Cook Robotham Architecture Bureau will receive the $ 65,000 second prize for a tower that is based upon the growing of algae in layers of droplets.

THE TOWER OF DROPLETS
The entire tower is inspired by the creation of energy. Living energy which must be……… Visible living energy SYMBOLISING THE VISIBLE ENERGY, ENTERPRISE AND INVENTIVE OPTIMISM OF THE TAIWANESE PEOPLE. The droplets are the primary elements of this process. Their activity, presence and form resonate throughout the scheme.

Much of the tower is open to the public to view the processes at close quarters. Even from the lifts, the daily state of vegetable husbandry will be visible. A variety of different arrangements of plantation and localized environment are distributed over its length. The principal purpose of the tower is to CREATE ALGAE.

When watered and filtered the algae create BIOMASS used as food for fish and plants and for making paper and BIOFUEL for powering engines. This process takes CO2 (a known hazard in Taiwan) out of the environment.

In the basic tower we provide 10.888 M2 surface of algae which produces 3,266,400 liters of oil and produces several thousand tons of biomass in a year. The same structure could be further developed – with accumulated Income and more bags to a maximum of double the surface and thus creating 6,532,800 liters of oil.

The structure is a series of steel lattices that wind around the steel elevator cores. The droplets are steel cages with membrane skinning. There are 3 observation levels:

TOP OBSERVATION LEVEL : overlooks the mountains
MID OBSERVATION LEVEL : contains areas of hydroponic vegetation growth : enabling PUBLIC VIEWING of plants and processes
LOWER OBSERVATION LEVELS : contain aviaries and aquaria

There are 3 office zones, all are used by the City development Authority. THE MUSEUM at the base of the tower contains 5 floors On its top are viewable algae systems. At middle levels are exhibition zones based of techniques developed by the authors at the Kunsthaus Graz (Austria) and the War Museum of the North.

Tower team : Jenna Al-Ali, Nuria Blanco, Lorene Faure, Selma Johannson
Consulting Engineer : Miike Kaverne of Buro Happold


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