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Consultancy

Merton Character Study

Solidspace input to the Character Study for the London Borough of Merton focused on the question of ‘What future growth should look like?’, and how the small sites development opportunities in the borough can be bought forward in a way that compliments and evolves the borough’s character.  With our understanding of small sites constraints and opportunities, we supported Allies & Morrison Urban Practitioners who were the lead consultant on the study, in building a picture of what Merton is today, drawing on the different identities across the borough and how these local qualities can inform approaches to growth and change. We took a sample of small site types that are commonly found across the borough’s character areas and developed capacity studies for them, outlining the constraints and opportunities of each site type, and provided recommendations for their unlocking and delivery. The study  The study will assist the Council, community groups,…

Consultancy

Hammersmith and Fulham Small Sites Study

The Small Sites Identification, Capacity and Design Study developed by Solidspace with Allies and Morrison will help the Council realise its aims for future sustainable growth in the borough which is ‘of the place’ and deeply informed by its local character. It is intended that the Study will provide a robust evidence-based strategy for future growth and intensification, in the context of focus-areas, typologies, and small sites, helping establish how areas of growth can accommodate new homes and jobs sensitively and successfully. Part of the Study will be a Design Code which will provide clear guidance to support high quality prospective development across the borough. Guidance and parameters for a range of identified typologies will demonstrate how good design and higher densities can work in symbiosis to help meet housing demand.

Development

81-87 Weston Street

Weston Street, located in the heart of Bermondsey, is our latest project. We have been working on it for over 10 years with long standing collaborator and architect Simon Allford, co-founder of AHMM, the practice that won the RIBA Stirling Prize 2015, the highest architectural accolade. The scheme comprises eight tessellating Solidspace apartments stacked above almost 5000 sq ft of 'Brutalist' office space. The apartments face south over the neighbouring park and conservation area. They are all two- or three-bedrooms arranged over half levels and incorporate the Solidspace DNA   Like the neighbouring Shard, the building has a minimalist, modern aesthetic, while the bricks reference the surrounding historic warehouses, and the aluminium window frames reproduce the elegance of the vernacular crittall windows. This area of London has undergone a significant amount of change in the last decade and we have watched as it has changed and evolved. Now, the area is home to…

Development

Shepherdess Walk

Shepherdess Walk, located between Old Street and Islington in central London, is our latest development to complete. Designed by Jaccaud Zein Architects, this project consists of five apartments and three terraced houses all designed with the split-level Solidspace DNA inside. This plot was once home to the UK's first HIV clinic, housed in a 1980s building that was subjected to bomb attacks amidst public hysteria. The area is characterised by a mix of styles from ornate late-Victorian buildings to 1950s low-rise housing. The site sits on the corner of Shepherdess Walk and Wenlock Street and complements its Victorian neighbours both in scale and materiality. Jaccaud Zein Architects' attention to detail is apparent throughout the development from the choice of Belgian brick to evoke the colour of London Stock to the rendered plastered walls inside. The project has been widely published with reviews in the Observer, Wallpaper*, Uncube, Architecture Today and the Architects’…

Development

Stapleton Hall Road

The site of Stapleton Hall Road, which we purchased at auction in December 2005, was an oddly shaped 270 square metre gap site sitting at a road junction. The surrounding area is characterised by late Victorian and early Edwardian houses bisected by the dominant infrastructure of the elevated Parkland Walk and the cutting of the London overground railway. On the site sat a faded yellow shop selling shoes, a single-storey redundant railway shelter and a huge advertising billboard. There were a number of hurdles we needed to overcome, including some long negotiations with Network Rail and discussions with the planning officer. Eventually we obtained consent in January 2011 with a design created in collaboration with Stephen Taylor Architects. Construction commenced in October 2012 for a pair of mirrored Solidspace houses. The two houses are arranged in a butterfly plan, symmetrical around the axis of the party wall. They are arranged…

Development

Centaur Street

We fell in love with this tapered site located between two south London streets, with its high arches and elevated railway tracks. It was 400 square metres of forgotten land owned by the London Borough of Lambeth. We bought the site at auction in December 1998 and appointed dRMM architects a year later. Our first planning application for six units in a six-storey bock was refused in October that year. We thought about appealing but compromised instead. The second application, approved in August 2000, was for a five-unit scheme over four storeys. We weren’t prepared to build the compromise and made a third application, approved in 2000, for a four-storey, four unit version of the first scheme. The project was completed in March 2003. It was constructed around three zones: the first zone being 4 metres wide with bathrooms, bedrooms, entrances and a lobby, granting cocoon to the occupier against…

Publication

Small Sites: Unlocking forgotten land for housing

Solidspace is leading a campaign to unlock more of the small sites which are overlooked by volume housebuilders, and suited to independent developers, which could make a huge difference in delivering the number of high-quality new homes so desperately needed. Small Sites: Unlocking forgotten land for housing is a publication using our own analysis from our development site finding to define the quantity of housing that could be built on a sample of small sites that we have appraised over 24 months. The concept schemes reinforce the suitability of our volumetric split-level DNA adapting to different site conditions. Together, our ‘discovered’ sites could supply Londoners with 238 new homes. All of these sites are in desirable locations with great transport connectivity, decreasing pressure on Green Belt development and encouraging more cycling and walking. They give back to their local community by hosting architecture that is contextual, and homes that are attractive to…

Development

100 Union Street

We have been working since 2008 to activate our site on 100 Union Street in Southwark, South London using it as a 'meanwhile space' until 2016 when we begin building a 20,000 sq ft self-contained office building completed winter 2017. The iconic design by Stirling Prize winning architects Allford Hall Monaghan Morris features open plan interiors with exposed concrete soffit and walls, full height ‘factory style’ windows, maple timber floor tiles, ‘acoustic’ decorative timber panelling and high ceilings. We believe that empty sites in London should contribute to their wider community and be used to test new ideas and allow emerging creative studios to create projects. We give the land along with water and electricity and give our partners the freedom to develop projects. So, Union Street has been a lido, a community garden, a lake, a public house and more! Read about the individual projects that have created in more detail…

Consultancy

Ealing Characterisation Study

Solidspace are providing small sites expertise supporting Allies & Morrison in producing a characterisation study for Ealing Council. With the drive of the Mayor’s Good Growth agenda and the small sites policy in the draft New London Plan, all London boroughs must face the challenges and opportunities of accounting for small sites, that in aggregate, contribute to increasing the number of homes being delivered for Londoners while ensuring this creates places that function well, are sustainable and where people want to live. The focus of our small sites research and analysis in Ealing is to identify small site types which repeat across the borough, in order to provide a steer and advice on small sites that can cumulatively make a significant contribution to delivering housing. We have identified a number of small site types across the borough and undertaken capacity studies with design code suggestions, providing clear advice on how these…

Publication

Shouldn’t we all be developers?

We need more homes and that’s a fact. We need volume, light and character. We need liberated rules. We need imagination to unlock forgotten plots. ‘Shouldn’t we all be developers’ articulates Roger Zogolovitch’s vision for recognition of the independent and creative developer playing their part to generate supply of new homes in the UK and beyond to meet population demand. Housing as a human right is the premise. Shouldn't we all be developers? first edition sold out in 2016. The second edition was published in September 2018. How to purchase the book: Via RIBA Bookshops or Amazon. An ebook edition is also available on Amazon which can be read on Kindle, smartphone, tablet etc. Zogolovitch works on ‘the backlands and the badlands that lurk behind the formal facades of the city’. His is ‘the territory of the forgotten’. The book draws on his experience of building on gap sites in London, examining each…

Development

Essex Mews

Our Essex Mews project took shape upon a former back land site of run-down garages located in a sedate south London suburb about ¼ mile from Crystal Palace. This area was characterised by detached and semi-detached Victorian houses with some low- to medium-rise 1970s apartments and large open green spaces. We acquired the site at auction in 2005 with planning consent for two rather mundane chalet bungalows. Working closely with architect Matthew Wood we produced a design for three modest, two-storey mews houses that featured the Solidspace DNA with ‘Eat Live Work’ open social spaces and three bedrooms above. The three Solidspace homes adopt the local vernacular and scale of traditional suburban homes, requested by the conservation area, with London stock bricks, pitched roofs and chimney stacks. The familiar and traditional exterior belies the invention of the split-level interior – a benefit of the Solidspace model that allows it to be…

Development

1a Donaldson Road

Our habit of driving around and scouting potential sites, revealed the plot for 1a Donaldson Road - sitting on a quiet road in Queen's Park. Previously home to six single-storey garages behind 77 Brondesbury Road, constructed in the 1970s as part of its conversion into flats, the site had a history of planning refusals and, frustrated, the owner finally decided to try his luck at auction. We were fortunate and purchased this 195 square metre site in October 2004, appointing architects Groves Natcheva to design a detached family house of 187 square metres. Planning consent was approved in October 2005, to create a building of two interlocking volumes in both plan and section. It was dug down by half a floor level and, although two storeys internally, its southern facade to the street was only 4.5 metres in height. This met the proscribed light angle from the windows to the rear…

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