Godson Street / Edgley Design


© Jack Hobhouse

© Jack Hobhouse


© Jack Hobhouse


© Jack Hobhouse


© Jack Hobhouse


© Jack Hobhouse

  • Architects: Edgley Design
  • Location: London Borough of Islington, United Kingdom
  • Architects In Charge: Jake Edgley and Ben Kirk
  • Area: 1015.0 sqm
  • Project Year: 2015
  • Photographs: Jack Hobhouse
  • Structural Engineer: Hardman Structural
  • Environmental/ Code For Sustainable Homes Consultant: SRE
  • Building Control Approved Inspector: BBS
  • Acoustic Engineer: KP Acoustics
  • Fire Strategy Engineer: IFC
  • Cdm Coordinator: Goddard Consulting
  • Main Contractor: Cape Construction

© Jack Hobhouse

© Jack Hobhouse

From the architect. Godson Street is a Community Joint Venture project. The three partner groups, led by Jake Edgley (director of Edgley Design), Chris Joannou (CKS partnership) and James Engel (director of Spaced Out Architecture) were neighbours of the vacant site, and formed a JV partnership to buy and develop the scheme. The brief was to create a mixed use building which would meet the varying needs of the JV partners, expressing the individuality of stakeholders while bringing this ‘difference’ together in a harmonious overall scheme


Elevation

Elevation

© Jack Hobhouse

© Jack Hobhouse

Section

Section

The overall concept was to re-imagine the Georgian houses that once occupied the site, with a lightwell to the front and internal stair to one side. A rear lightwell creates a liveable basement. Large glazed windows to the ground floor enliven a once forgotten backstreet.  The layout has been inverted, with bedrooms to the lower levels where a more closed relationship to the street does not affect internal amenity. The living spaces are moved to the upper floors, where larger windows can give light and views out without compromising privacy. The living spaces are articulated as a metal clad, sculptural form that has been folded out of the front elevation to create windows and views to the south, maintaining privacy across the street. An angled roof creates north facing rooflights to the second floor. The faceted form of the roof is derived from a rights to light analysis of neighbouring residences. Five mixed use buildings are created, with commercial space to ground and basement and residential apartments above, and a townhouse to the north.


© Jack Hobhouse

© Jack Hobhouse

Ground Floor

Ground Floor

© Jack Hobhouse

© Jack Hobhouse

1st Floor Plan

1st Floor Plan

© Jack Hobhouse

© Jack Hobhouse

Product Description. The upper residential levels are conceived as dynamic, angular forms which address surrounding neighbour and occupier issues; privacy, overlooking, daylight and rights to light. The zinc ‘skin’ (VM Zinc) is split and punctured, creating views out and exposing the core of the volume, articulated in a cementitious material. – Marley Eternit


© Jack Hobhouse

© Jack Hobhouse

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