ArchShowcase 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. Twickenham Stadium Hospitality in United Kingdom by SHH ArchitectsJuly 9th, 2014 by Sumit Singhal
Article source: SHH Architects Twickenham Stadium, the home of English rugby,was looking to upgrade the customer experience at its food and beverage retail offers in order to be truly world-class across all areas of its offer in time for the 2015 Rugby World Cup, which England is set to host after winning the 2009 selection bid. At the same time, the stadium’s owners – the RFU (Rugby Football Union)- had changed a number of its core branding elements and these also had to be incorporated into any new designs. The result is the Twickenham Experience – a joint venture between the RFU and operator Levy Restaurants(the sports and leisure division of Compass UK & Ireland).
SHH worked as the design partner for Levy Restaurants on the new project,tasked with creating completely new designs for the bar and food servery areas, which are located all around the stadium (numbering 40 units in total). Twickenham Stadium is made up of four stands (north, south, east and west) with lower, middle and upper tiers for each stand. ‘This was a very exciting opportunity for Levy Restaurants as it really allowed us the chance to bring our retail philosophy into play, which we have spent a long time creating’ commented Roy Westwood, Creative Director of Levy Restaurants.‘This is based on how a bar can best function efficiently in this kind of concourse environment,through the creation of multiple levels of customer interaction, which ensure that a really different customer experience that is memorable, unique and much more open and welcoming than traditional kiosk operations.’ The brief to SHH for the concourse food and drink offers was to integrate all practical and operational requirements in a visually-impactful environment that would improve customer experience, forming part of a much more developed design approach than one would normally find in a stadium environment. The specific criteria were threefold: speed of service, ease of processing and visual clarity in terms of queuing, choosing and paying. ‘The bar and food unit redesign came with a lot of challenges’ commented SHH Creative Director Neil Hogan. ‘Although the units are located under cover on each level, they are also exposed to the elements because of the open access from the stadium seating areas. They therefore had to be engineered as if they were outdoor barsin order to contend with the cold and the damp. Usage before, after and during matches – especially at half-time – can be incredibly frenetic with huge queues and massive time pressures for serving, so everything had to function incredibly tightly.’ The simple words for the re-designed offers – ‘Hunger’ and ‘Thirst’ – came from the new RFU brand guidelines, but SHH chose to use them at super scale on huge red façades for maximum impact and visibility. As the base units themselves were fairly unforgiving – cold, hard and made of concrete – the strong use of colour, graphics and lighting was important to enable them to stand out as much as possible. Wherever possible, the height of the units was used in full to open them up and play with proportions and scale and to make the units feel more welcoming and enticing for customers. ‘SHH have really played on the material palette and scale of these outlets in their designs’ added Roy Westwood, ‘choosing to complement the industrial, rather brutalist feel of the core shells rather than concealing or working against them.’ Digital screens at two scales (large in the exterior corridor area and smaller for behind the counters) are used to alert, direct and inform customers, as well as to underscore RFU Twickenham’s brand values. The graphic language for the screens was created by SHH and offers the operator and the RFU flexibility as to which brands are advertised, as these can change according to games and individual sponsorship deals. Special offers and prices are also flagged up here. ‘As a subtle reflection of the location, we photographed the famous wall of bronze statues of famous former players at Twickenham’ explained Neil Hogan, ‘and then used elements of those images in shadow form on some of the more generic digital images to add a sense of place.’ Customers see the well-lit façades and digital screens from a distance as they approach, helping them make the choice of which bar or food servery to queue at. Small white cubes mounted onto the red facades help delineate queues according to payment type – cash or cash & card – to improve speed of service. The right place to queue is subtly underlined by vertical red lighting strips set into the black bar fascia, whilst high-level shelving helps those queuing to make their choices before they arrive at the counter and give their order. The design of each bar is layered, with industrial pendant lights at the front for the ‘Hunger’ counters and a material palette that includes chunky mesh, black steel fronts, stainless steel counters and red waterproof laminate; a ‘hardy and masculine’ overall look according to Neil Hogan. The new designs for this first phase of the master plan are all now completed, open and functioning very well, helping to keep people moving – and in good tempers! – during the full-on rush of the interval. Later phases of the overall hospitality master plan are still to be implemented. ‘This project shows just how effective the teamwork is between the Levy Restaurants’ Innovations Creative Team and SHH’ Roy Westwood concluded. ‘Our relationship goes from strength to strength and finds expression in the delivery of unique client experiences that are totally aligned to individual venues.’ About SHH: SHH is an architects’ practice and interior design consultancy, formed in 1991 by its three principals: Chairman David Spence, Managing Director Graham Harris and Creative Director Neil Hogan. With a highly international workforce and portfolio, the company initially made its name in ultra-high-end residential schemes, before extending its expertise to include hospitality and workspace schemes. SHH has won or been shortlisted for over 80 creative awards for its projects, across three continents, and is work appears several times each week in leading design and lifestyle publications all over the world. Recent hospitality projects include: the new Terrace Restaurant at London Zoo; Equus (the new bar, restaurant and hospitality suite at Sandown Park Racecourse); The Coach House at Hatfield House, winner of the Best Café Award at the Restaurant & Bar Design Awards 2012 and Best Leisure Interior at the International Property Awards 2013/2014; Café Liberty at Liberty department store; a luxury passenger lounge for private air carrier Rizon Jet at Biggin Hill airport and the Barbican Foodhall and Lounge, winners of four major design awards including the Best Bar or Restaurant at the FX Awards 2012 and the Best Independent Restaurant at the Restaurant & Bar Design Awards 2011 www.shh.co.uk About Levy Restaurants: Levy Restaurants is an official catering and hospitality provider for prestigious venues from The O2 Arena, Chelsea Football Club, Somerset House and Twickenham Stadium to Liberty in London and the SECC in Glasgow; all of which have different demographics and business needs. Levy Restaurants creates individually-tailored experiences, focusing not only on food and drink, but on the local suppliers used, customer service and the design of the venues. Levy Restaurants, a leading provider of premium quality food and drink experiences, is part of Compass Group UK & Ireland. Levy Restaurants specialises in the creation of tailor-made concepts, service standards and designs to appeal to differing target customer bases in public, hospitality and banqueting areas. Share this:RelatedContact SHH Architects
Tags: United Kingdom Categories: Bar, Hospitality, Restaurant This entry was posted on Wednesday, July 9th, 2014 at 2:43 am. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site. |