查看完整案例
收藏
下载
翻译
Architects:Morris+Company
Area:2400m²
Year:2019
Photographs:Jack Hobhouse
Environmental Engineer:TUV-SUD
Planning Consultants:DP9
structural Engineer:Robert Bird Group
project management:Lendlease
Landscape Collaborator:Gillespies
Energy Design:Eon Energy
Daylight Analysis:Gordon Ingram Associates
Transport and Infrastructure Consultant:Peter Brett Associates
Client:Lendlease
Project Directors:Joe Morris, David Storring
Project Architect:Holly Hayward
General Contractor :Lendlease
Costs Consultant:Bruce Shaw
Air Quality Consultant:Parsons Brinckerhoff
Community Engagement:Soundings
Fire Engineering Consultants:Buro Happold
Acoustics Engineer:Sandy Brown
Building Control Consultant:Southwark Building Control
City:London
Country:United Kingdom
Context. The Energy Hub is a unique mixed-use building within the regeneration masterplan for Elephant and Castle. Developed with Lendlease, the 4-storey building contains a combined heat and power facility, nursery, café and community space and pocket park. The project comprises a combination of community and commercial uses never before entwined in one building.
As well as facilities to provide heat and power to 3000+ new homes, an important aspect of Morris+Company’s process was to highlight the distinctiveness of the programmatic adjacencies. Where possible, relationships and facilities are shared, visual connections are made and a wider engagement established to the surrounding context.
Site. The site acts as a gateway to the masterplan, located on the corner of Heygate Street and at the southern end of the proposed Elephant Park. Set against a backdrop of taller brick residential buildings emerging from the masterplan, the Energy Hub’s distinct materiality and typology act as a civic marker, with the energy centre chimney set to the corner of Heygate Street.
The building acts as a buffer to the busy Heygate Street, providing views into the industrial workings of the energy centre, whilst sheltering the entrance to the nursery, café and community space to the east, set amid a new pocket park and playground
Project. The sculptural qualities of the massing and façade have been carefully curated to conceal and reveal activities from the building’s varied programmes. Windows into the energy centre offer education on how energy is created within the city.
On the upper levels, the nursery has large windows and terraces allowing visual connections to the local school and across the terrace rooftops. A double-height café and community space open out onto the pocket park and children’s play area creating activity on the ground floor. The public realm has been designed to retain the established London Plane trees on the site and provides playspace and greenspace to residents and the public.
Typology. A composition of differing sized windows punctuate the building’s skin, defined by the varied programmes in the building, from picture windows into the energy centre, to a seat for nursery children. The perforated metal façade conceals a secondary set of openable windows and louvres that reveal themselves at night, giving the building an ever-changing facade.
Materiality. Metal anodised perforated cladding reveals the differing personality of the building between day and night. A concrete datum wraps the base of the building with red aggregate revealed around entrances, in reference to the surrounding Victorian red brick buildings.
Project gallery
Project location
Address:Heygate St, London SE17 1SN, United Kingdom