Graduated from BA interior design environment architecture (1st) this summer and decided to further my interests in architecture/design by enrolling onto an MA specializing in architecture (MA Environment Design). I also work in London as a freelance designer for a branding environments company (Flourish Creative) which i am really enjoying. I'm using this blog to record my experience on the MA and to show my progression on the course (My Learning Log).
Thursday, 27 November 2008
Elephant & Castle housing delay "not acceptable" admits regeneration boss
London SE1 website team
Delays to the building of new social housing intended for tenants of the Heygate Estate are "clearly not acceptable for residents", regeneration supremo Cllr Paul Noblet told a town hall committee last week.
Southwark Council's cross-party overview and scrutiny committee held a meeting last week to investigate progress on the £1.3 billion Elephant & Castle regeneration programme.
Lend Lease deal
Asked for an update on the planned deal with developers Lend Lease, Cllr Paul Noblet (executive member for regeneration) reiterated that "working together with Transport for London is probably the most tortuous aspect of the deal".
The committee also asked Cllr Noblet whether he remained confident in Lend Lease's commitment to the Elephant in the light of their well-publicised funding difficulties at the Olympic Village.
"I don't have any questions over their commitment and ability to raise the finance for this project," he replied.
The committee heard that work is currently under way on a "revised masterplan" for the Elephant, but project director Jon Abbott was at pains to insist that this is "not a rip it up and start again exercise".
Cllr Noblet confirmed that all parties are "working very much towards December" for the signing of the final agreement with Lend Lease, but this timetable is dependent on agreeing costings for work to the Northern Line tube station with Transport for London.
"I don't think that the scheme should pay for the backlog in investment in transport assets at the Elephant & Castle," said Jon Abbott.
Southern roundabout and subway removal
The committee heard that Transport for London had concluded that Southwark's preferred redesign of the Elephant & Castle/Newington Butts/Walworth Road intersection as a T-junction with surface-level pedestrian crossings – planned for more than two years – would have an unacceptable impact on traffic flows.
A revised proposal from Transport for London – likely to be in the form of a signalled roundabout – is now being worked on.
This was confirmed last week by TfL commissioner Peter Hendy, who wrote: "The southern roundabout at Elephant and Castle is an important node on the Inner Ring Road. The scheme for this junction was re-examined to ensure that all had been done to smooth traffic flow, while retaining benefits for cyclists and pedestrians and in terms of the urban realm.
"As a consequence, TfL has developed a more balanced solution to meet the requirement, which is now being worked into a detailed design for discussion with Southwark Council and key stakeholders."
Credit crunch
The committee discussed the impact of the economic downturn on the regeneration plans for the Elephant.
Cllr David Hubber noted with concern the recent cut in the level of affordable housing at the 360 London development on the site of the former London Park Hotel and asked whether other developers would be likely to seek similar concessions.
Cllr Veronica Ward asked about the lack of progress on the Oakmayne Plaza site on New Kent Road. "Clearly they are having trouble raising the finance for the scheme; hence the revised planning application," replied Jon Abbott.
Heygate Estate and 'early housing' sites
Heygate tenant Helen O'Brien and former tenant Jerry Flynn made representations to the committee asking for a full investigation of the council's failure to built the so-called 'early housing sites' – several of them in SE1 – intended to provide new homes for existing Heygate tenants.
The council selected housing associations in 2005 but the first planning applications are only now being submitted.
"If they were built we wouldn't be in the mess we are now," said Mrs O'Brien.
Mr Flynn added: "You can't blame it on the credit crunch because there wasn't a credit crunch three years ago."
The council now says that it wants to clear the remaining tenants from the estate for "community safety reasons" and commence demolition of some blocks next year.
The reality is that many Heygate tenants have already been rehoused within the council's existing housing stock and a relatively small percentage have indicated that they intend to exercise their 'right to return' to the Elephant area so the original estimate of new homes required is now obsolete.
Cllr Noblet confirmed that he had stopped calling the development sites "early housing sites" in view of the late running of the scheme.
Five sites – including New Kent Road, St George's Road and Library Street in SE1 – are now in the planning system.
Cllr Noblet attributed the delays to "unfortunate circumstances".
It's clearly not acceptable for residents
"It's clearly not acceptable for residents, and I'm sorry that that's where we are," he told the committee, adding that the current five sites would serve as "templates" for a future conveyor belt of housing developments.
"It's the huge regret of myself and the administration that we didn't get the conveyor belt going by July 2007," he said.
The question of the delayed Elephant housing sites was also raised at last week's Council Assembly meeting. "This administration should hang their heads in shame," said Labour's Cllr Paul Bates.
Even Lib Dem loyalist James Gurling, chair of the borough's planning committee, has described the delays to the new housing as a "travesty".
The Heygate is not fit for human habitation
Council leader Nick Stanton defended the council's policy to move remaining residents from the Heygate Estate: "The Heygate is not fit for human habitation," he told councillors.
In heated exchanges in the council chamber, Labour councillor and parliamentary candidate Kirsty McNeill accused the ruling Lib Dem/Tory administration of a "failure of empathy, justice and common sense" in its dealings with Heygate tenants.
Housing boss Cllr Kim Humphreys conceded that the process had been "bumpy" but insisted that "it is not safe to allow people to live there".
Small businesses at the Elephant and the shopping centre
Jon Abbott updated the scrutiny committee on measures being taken to support small businesses at the Elephant & Castle, with whom he admitted that the council has had an "uneasy relationship".
He said that the recent confirmation that the shopping centre will remain standing until 2012 had provided a degree of certainty that made it easier for businesses to plan and invest.
A Towntalk website has been set up to promote businesses at the Elephant and the council is in discussion with shopping centre landlords St Modwen about investment in new signage and proposals to repaint the building.
Heygate Estate - Image set
The London County Council initiated a major development of the Elephant and Castle Area from the late 1950s.
The last stage in this process was Heygate Estate of 1970 to 1974.
Though big by most standards (it provided 1194 homes), it is overshadowed by the much larger Aylesbury Estate a little to the south.




























Wednesday, 26 November 2008
Era of Parker Boris dawns as mayor sets minimum space standards for London housing
By Vikki Miller
Mayor Boris Johnson will introduce minimum space standards for new homes in his upcoming London Plan.
The announcement of the move away from what Johnson called the present glut of “hobbit homes” came as he unveiled a £5 billion draft housing strategy this morning to boost the capital’s failing housing market in the next three years.
Johnson said: “I think it is a disgrace that the average size of a newly built home in this country is 76sq m compared to 206sq m in Australia… We are not hobbits, and we need to stop building homes for hobbits. We need a legacy of which our generation will be proud.”
He added: “Of course there will be [a] push back from developers, but you have to look to the interests of the people. We are going to be, in the new London Plan, insisting on a new Parker Morris standard.”
The Parker Morris standards, drawn up in the 1960s, were a set of minimum space standards for public housing.
However, not all architects will welcome the news.
HTA Architects’ managing director Ben Derbyshire said on BD’s website last week: “The more complex and demanding [space] standards are, the less likely they are to have significant benefits…
“I'm concerned by reports that Boris Johnson is falling for the misconception that physical standards will raise housing quality overall.”
The mayor’s strategy also included plans for a London housing design guide to ensure higher environmental standards for new homes developed with public funding, as well as better safety, security and liveability.
Private developers will be “encouraged” to adopt the standards in the guide.
“It is important we do not compromise on the quality and the attractiveness of what we build,” the mayor said. “I don’t want the stuff that we build to be torn down in 20 or 30 years’ time, I want it to stand.”
Johnson reiterated his election pledge to scrap London’s 50% affordable homes targets, which he said got “in the way of good development”.
He did, however, confirm plans to build 50,000 affordable homes by 2011, which he said would be achieved by agreeing separate targets with each London borough.
Under the new plan, Johnson also pledged to:
* prioritise public funding for new housing that embraces Secured by Design standards and has a high level of environmental benefit;
* bring forward public and private sector land for new homes;
* buy up unsold market homes for use as affordable housing; and
* build more family homes
Tuesday, 25 November 2008


The mile-high tower also illustrates the ecological advantages of living tall, as building up instead of out holds more people in a smaller footprint. This in turn reduces ecological impacts and the time needed to transport them. Close-knit living is also a way to rebuild disconnected communities, and to make life safer through the ‘natural surveillance’ created by populating areas 24/7.
Drawn up by Popularchitecture and intended for Tower Hamlets in East London, the giant skyscraper would be three times larger than anything ever built in the capital, creating 12 new ‘villages’ in the sky. However, despite the project’s ‘almost unbelievable proportions’, practice founder Tom Teatum does not feel the scheme is that crazy, insisting there are developers who are interested, ‘in particular because of minimal land value in relation to accommodation… occupying a scale far beyond anything that currently exists in London, the tower would allow the city’s population to expand without significant impact to the architectural fabric on the ground.’
At the center of the structure would be a ‘vast internal void’ lit by circular openings every 20 storys. Each of these ‘holes’ would be used as either public squares or for specialist activities such as ice skating, botanic gardens or swimming pools. Nice idea and nice visuals but it looks like it’ll be firmly rooted in our imaginations for the time being.
Monday, 24 November 2008
Capital Spaces: Transforming London
English Heritage and the Royal Institute of British Architects have joined forces to publish a call to action to ensure London is fit for the spotlight of world attention. Capital Spaces: Transforming London was launched at Wellington Arch 8 February 2005, a week before the arrival of the International Olympic Committee in London."
St George's circus is mentioned (along with the Elephant & Castle plans) on page 19 (project 24). .
"Nearby, St George's Circus is to be restored. This once proud piece of Georgian town planning, where terraced houses raidate from a spacious circus, marks the meeting point of five routes. London South Bank University which owns most of the land in the area has a crucial role to play in the rejuvenation plans."
You can download a copy of Capital Spaces on the EH website at
http://www.english-heritage.org.uk/default.asp?WCI=NewsItem&WCE=540
There is a sketch birds eye view showing a number of planned new buildings around the Circus and along London Road. The Duke of Clarence and the terrace seem to be kept, but with a taller building occupying the block immediately behind them.
The plans also appear to include demolishing the 1960s office block on the north east corner (east side of Blackfriars Road) and building a twin for the student housing that went up a few years ago on the north west corner on the former eye hospital site.
They also appear to include a tall building (10 storeys +???) on the junction of London Road opposite St George's RC Cathedral, on the currently empty airspace above the Bakerloo line sidings.
This seems a bizarre proposal for EH to endorse, as surely it would dominate theCathedral. (Having said this, the current south facade is underwhelming - is the Roman Catholic Church ever going to find/encourage an ultra-conservative benefactor to pay for completing the tower to Pugin's design rather than some more obviously deserving charitable purpose)
(The sketch is credited to and copyright "Urban Practioners" - a firm of regeneration consultants who have apparently been appointed by English Heritage- see this earlier press release
http://www.towncentres.ltd.uk/pages/mediacentre/press/18-03-04a.htm )
Possible Site???

Thursday, 20 November 2008
Sustainable Urban Communities
This is an interesting article i found by Edwin Heathcote, architecture critic at Financial Times.
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Tuesday, 18 November 2008
Monday, 17 November 2008
Thursday, 13 November 2008
Thursday, 6 November 2008
BIG IDEA!
Architecture for the Community. Socially responsible design that creates spaces for people and produces environments that matter in the community. Looking at how a specific community can help design or affect its own infrastructure, the ways people interact and how this is used to create a sense of place.
This could be to rework of redundant or derelict space, empty pockets within the urban fabric, or areas of that show a lack of human presence or areas that have an overcrowded presence. Asking the questioning what the community needs or what help this space prosper? This could also be a form of flexible architecture that could move from site to site, something I am looking into…….sustainability within the design, a business model and lifecycle of the project. How might it integrate into the future of London city plan??
To develop multi-functional and layered environments that encompass different types of processes for the creation of new spaces, combining a diverse range users and forming a rationale that draws inspiration from the people it’s designed for and the community in which the project takes place.
My interests also lie in keeping in context sustainable and environmental issues, for example new types of materials or ways of saving energy. Looking at innovative and experimental methods of design and construction and the impact this can have on the overall aesthetic of a space. How can the materiality of a defined space inspire further ways of representing a sites cultural heritage, looking at its historical context to help instigate a model for the future?