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Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal loves modern architecture. He comes from a family of builders who have built more than 20 projects in the last ten years near Delhi in India. He has recently started writing about the architectural projects that catch his imagination.

Alex Monroe Studio in Snowsfields, South London by DSDHA

 
July 24th, 2013 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: DSDHA

The Alex Monroe Studio, Snowsfields is a new jewellery studio, sited within a stone’s throw of The Shard in the Bermondsey Conservation Area, providing a showcase for Alex’s growing international business. Consisting of a handcrafted 3-storey addition to an existing Edwardian single-storey shop front, the building provides workshop and studio space, alongside a boutique store, with meeting and dining spaces on the upper levels as well as a roof terrace with views towards London Bridge. The new building operates as a bespoke ‘bookend’ to the original terrace, creating a strong prow that completes the street frontage. The design maintains the continuity of the shop fronts, whilst the additional floors form a separate metal clad volume that sits lightly above.

Image Courtesy © Dennis Gilbert

  • Architects: DSDHA
  • Project: Alex Monroe Studio
  • Location: Snowsfields, South London
  • Photography: Dennis Gilbert
  • Client: Alex Monroe
  • Contractor: Neilcott Construction Limited
  • Structural Engineer: Structure Workshop
  • Services Engineer: Con-Serv Limited
  • Quantity Surveyor: Robert Martell & Partners
  • Facade Consultant: Procare

Image Courtesy © Dennis Gilbert

As in Alex’s previous studio in Iliffe Yard, South London (where DSDHA are based) connections with the outside world are critical to providing good working conditions, and every opportunity to connect with nature was therefore seized. Sliding doors to the workshop open onto the street and allow for interaction with the world, providing a place to extend one’s view as a counterpoint to the focused work of the jewellers within. A balcony at the third floor extends the sense of openness in the dining/meeting room, and windows with a variety of outlooks are carefully placed to maximize engagement with the urban landscape. Individual activities hosted on each floor are connected by a spacious ‘social’ staircase, claimed as an additional exhibition space and place of chance encounter, mitigating the challenge of what is, in effect, a Pencil Building (a term coined in Japan to characterize narrow buildings on tiny sites.

Image Courtesy © Dennis Gilbert

The facade is precious, precise and carefully made; it is designed to celebrate the ‘art of making’. Featuring a slightly dark grey-bronze tonality the facade has a lustrous finish that subtly picks up on the surrounding buildings and their diverse tones and colours, and change in luminosity over the duration of the day). The spacing of the vertical ‘fins’ on the elevation shifts selectively in front of windows to animate the facade and control views in and out of the building, introducing dynamism in the street, and de-scaling the building as a micro-tower in the company of both the Shard and Guy’s Tower.

Image Courtesy © Dennis Gilbert

The rhythm of the facade is accentuated with a double height glazed area on the south elevation, across the workshop and meeting room levels, offering unobstructed views to the surrounding area. The horizontal detail relates directly to the neighbouring terrace to reference, but not mimic, the context. The building structure is constructed entirely from prefabricated structural timber panels, the use of which has removed 27.1 tonnes of CO2 from the atmosphere.

Image Courtesy © Dennis Gilbert

Internally this simple structure is left visible. This raw finish provides a robust setting for the studio where all the built-in furniture has been made from the same timber specifically for each part of the jewellery making process. Over time the timber will reveal a patina of use, recording day-to-day life.

Image Courtesy © Dennis Gilbert

DSDHA was established by Deborah Saunt and David Hills in 1998, and in 2010 they were shortlisted for the RIBA Stirling Prize for Christ’s College, Guildford, as well as being named Architect of the Year and Education Architect of the Year. Their work blurs the boundary between architecture, landscape and urbanism, and is best known for its innovative approach to sustainability and public engagement. Their projects have been recognised with ten RIBA Awards in the last decade, and they have twice been nominated for the Mies Van Der Rohe Prize for Contemporary Architecture.

Image Courtesy © Dennis Gilbert

Recent projects range from a gateway building for London’s Olympic Village, a flagship store in the West End and a new studio for writer and artist Edmund de Waal. In addition, DSDHA has been involved in significant urban design proposals including the redesign of Parliament Square with Foster & Partners, improvements to the public realm between The Albert Memorial and The Royal Albert Hall, as well as urban regeneration projects for Waterloo and Vauxhall Pleasure Gardens. Deborah and David also lead the studio’s urban research, regularly writing and broadcasting on architecture, and have taught widely including at EPFL (Lausanne), University of Cambridge, AA, RCA and currently Cass School of Architecture.

Image Courtesy © Dennis Gilbert

Image Courtesy © DSDHA

Image Courtesy © DSDHA

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