BDP 2013: Cities
Transcription
BDP 2013: Cities
FEATURES | twenty thirteen relevant section - xxxx Night scenes of high-density buildings © Nohead Lam | Dreamstime.com 04 features 06 22 Tessa O’Neill Town Planning Director 26 Steve Merridew Environmental Engineering Director It’s not what you buy, but the way that you buy it thought piece two lessons from the moai thought piece three OLD BUILDINGS, NEW LIFE thought piece four Francis Glare Director Urbanism megacities an inescapable opportunity thought piece one 14 18 CONTRIBUTORS chairman's FOREWORD 30 a cultural heart thought piece five greening the city thought piece six Tim Leach Architect Director Richard McDowell Architect Director Darrell Wilson Landscape Architect Associate Chris Harding Director Architecture 34 thought piece seven 40 42 46 3 Review 2013 twenty thirteen community and identity chief executive’s review review of WORK ON THE BOARDS ggb award WINNING project 2012 CHAIRMAN’S FOREWORD Mad about travel 1 Dubrovnik; 2 Venice; 3 Delhi; 4 New York; 5 Shanghai; 6 Chicago; 7 Düsseldorf 2. 2013 3. 5. CHAIRMAN’S foreword DAVID CASH | CHAIRMAN 1. In 2013, more than half of the global population will be living in cities. The poor ones; cities where the landscape, topography and rapid rise in the rate of urbanism, particularly in the over their form in contrast to those which have developing world, presents many opportunities as well developed in a featureless terrain which makes little as great challenges to those of us who are responsible or no impact. There are cities where the local culture for the design of the built environment. Urban place is powerfully expressed, resulting in a strong sense making has long had a central role within BDP’s core of identity, whilst others are less distinctive and more skill set. Therefore, we have dedicated this edition of international in feel. our annual publication to the topical, stimulating and vitally important subject of cities. create places for people. This does not apply to just any people but rather to the specific inhabitants of the Having been at the forefront of BDP’s international 6. natural elements have exerted a powerful influence In BDP, our philosophy is driven by the desire to 4. expansion over the last few years, I have had the place in question. That is why it is so important to come opportunity to visit a large number of very different to fully understand those places where we are working Furthermore, it is enormously encouraging that our cities in all parts of the world. Discovering new places and the people for whom we are designing. No matter ethos and philosophy remain as relevant today as is one of the great joys of travel. After all, cities are how many wonderful new ideas or exciting modern ever. We provide all the design disciplines associated created by people and as well as providing shelter technologies are introduced, it is not possible to create with the built environment in one organisation. We and refuge they reflect the hopes, aspirations and something which has a true sense of place without first pursue design excellence, accompanied by a refusal culture of the community for which they exist. But fully appreciating the context, and acknowledging that to accept second best. We work collaboratively with cities are also living organisms, in a constant state of context is not merely physical but social and economic our clients and the local community who are a key evolution and flux. It is this dynamic quality, driven by too. This is one reason why BDP has put down roots in part of the team. These are all concepts welcomed by the desire to be better – more efficient, more beautiful, key locations around the world. It means that not only our clients because they know that the result will be a more prosperous and more successful – that propels can a better service be given to our clients but also better solution to their problems. a city forward and fuels it with energy and excitement. that a fusion of the local culture with that of BDP will produce a real sense of place. working in the modern world. To be successful, it As with people, cities come in all shapes and sizes and no two are the same. There are ancient cities which have evolved gradually over hundreds or even thousands of years so that one can read the layers of history in the streets, squares and buildings. These contrast with the more recent creations which have sprung up, seemingly from nothing, over the last decade or so. There are organic cities where informal street patterns give rise to intriguing juxtapositions and spaces. These are the counterpoint to the formally planned layouts where precision and discipline are the dominant characteristics. There are wealthy cities and I have been greatly heartened to discover a warm response to BDP’s humanist design approach in every part of the world I have visited. It is important to recognise the challenges of 7 This publication comprises a series of seven is essential to embrace change. This applies to thought pieces on different aspects of the subject individuals, organisations like BDP and to whole of cities, all of which have been prepared by communities. For cities, the rate of change is greater individuals within our organisation from the now than ever before. I am greatly excited by the new challenges coming forward, the sense that the world is ever shrinking and that ideas pass more and more different perspectives of their own professional background and experience. It also includes rapidly from place to place. I know this view is shared illustrations of a selection of the work currently by our collaborators and both clients and colleagues being designed within BDP together with projects of BDP. n recently completed on site which have been submitted for the Grenfell Baines Award. THOUGHT PIECE ONE | megacities relevant section - xxxx words | FRANCIS GLARE L iving in an urbanised world. In the 19th century, London was the only world city of more than five million people. Now there are at least 54, mostly in Asia, and an increasing number of cities with more than 10 million inhabitants. mega cities People living in urban locations have outnumbered those in rural areas since 2007 and two in three people born in the next 30 years will live in cities. So cities, and big cities, are inescapable. They have a dominant impact on every facet of our existence from our social and economic networks to our difficult relationship with natural resources. The megacity is a prospect that both inspires and horrifies commentators. The case for is presented AN INESCAPABLE OPPORtUNITY in terms of cities as creative, entrepreneurial and enriching places; the case against is couched in terms of social and environmental ills, the increasing scale of cities giving rise to increasing disparity. City planners are accused of dehumanising tendencies in city planning responses and the servicing of the city denudes the hinterland of resources. Regardless of the polemic, the evidence of those with choice is frequently the creation of protected urban enclaves, the city to be endured for the promise of the weekend retreat – this is as true of Chengdu as it is of London. Is the city really the fount of all evil and are we really this schizophrenic that we cannot reconcile our human desires in one place? In recent years BDP has contributed to research into the future of ‘humane cities’ and ‘smart cities’ whilst pondering the responses from city governments. These range from the visionary and bold to the anxious and panicked, illustrating the breadth of the debate on The megacity is a prospect that both inspires and horrifies commentators. cities and urbanisation. But for all this breadth, in 2013 we discern the balance moving away from viewing the city as a necessary evil to be managed in a fairer and more equitable way, to the city as the solution to the challenges of our age. > 7 © Imrich Farkas | Dreamstime.com Reviewthirteen 2013 twenty THOUGHT PIECE ONE | megacities Urbanisation is now seen as good news rather than a necessary and squalid by-product of economic Cities of To-Morrow in 1902). His manifesto sought to contain what he saw as an otherwise unstoppable (and utterly disastrous) tide of development. Many experts urbanisation by drawing have come to realise people into new that people are better self-contained and off when they live utopian ‘garden- in a city. This is not to ignore cities’. Actually the problems whilst Howard of urban life, was right particularly in about the fast growing human desire cities in for more say Asia living space and Africa. and better conditions, But even in he was wrong the shanty about the future towns the of cities and opportunities are certainly wrong greater than in the about the scaling rural hinterland. of successful urban As the city – whether places. historic, regional, However, until recently many functional, capital or mega – is the context for the great majority of BDP’s work, we are ardent enthusiasts for urban places. But in 2013, it is right to consider what the increasing rate of urbanisation might mean for the planning and could be forgiven for thinking that Howard was right as planners, architects and city leaders reacted to increasing overcrowding and congestion with a somewhat heavy hand, often ripping apart city centres and communities to aerate THE CITY IS CENTRAL TO OUR CULTURE AS HUMANS. S Zhengzhou masterplan peculation about the future city. Howard was of course only one in a long ‘The Road’, the city is central to our culture as humans. tradition of urban futurists. Le Corbusier developed the Radiant City, American futurist pursuing a more academic approach, accumulating For every visionary however, there is a scientist Buckminster Fuller advanced the ideas of Spaceship evidence and developing models, viewing the city as a system and technology as a tool to make cities design of the living environments of the majority of the city. Ordered and clean environments to house the Earth, the authors William Gibson and J G Ballard have the world’s people. This includes not just the profound urban poor were created and in the process, urban promoted their own dystopian scenarios. The future more efficient (or ‘smarter’). If the first group requires impacts on the ecological balance of the planet but also functions were separated out, forcing residential city is thus a recurrent theme in literature, film and the a leap of faith then the second might be seen as a the social conditions of people growing up and growing development into the suburbs. blogosphere. From the high tech and dehumanised ‘means’ looking for an end; the former ignores the world of Metropolis; to David Lynch’s chilling urban milieu, the latter the purpose of cities and the commentary on the breakdown of community in human endeavour. The role of the urban planner, American suburbia in his film ‘Blue Velvet’, and the architect masterplanner and urban designer must bittersweet conclusion of Cormac McCarthy’s be to understand the nature of urban places and the vision of life after the death of cities and community in processes of urban change and in this way, provide old in cities. A 19 century perspective. th In the 19 century UK cities were riding an th economic boom, bursting with people, many in desperate conditions. Friedrich Engels, collaborator of Marx, wrote of Manchester, ‘….he who turns in thither gets into a filth and disgusting grime, the equal of which is not to be found - especially in the courts which lead down to the Irk, and which contain unqualifiedly the most horrible dwellings which I have The city has come to be seen less as a source of problems and more as an opportunity to fix them. Many experts have come to realise that people are better off when they live in a city. the locus for the urban debate, from vision to delivery. We use the values of placemaking, in BDP terms, Creating Places for People, as principles that enable us to understand place, envision the future city and then create the urban framework within which to apply technologies, so creating urban places that are yet beheld.’ Contemporary sanitary inspectors in ‘smart’ and that have purpose. For us this is a way of London wrote of finding rooms in slums occupied by connecting vision, ambition and the understanding of ‘father, mother, three children and four pigs.’ the urban dynamic so that we can engage with urban Urban planning was a response to the conditions of such cities and Ebenezer Howard was a founding father, publishing his book ‘To-Morrow: A Peaceful Path to Real Reform’ in 1898 (only retitled Garden processes to realise plans – neither a leap of faith Above: the polycentric city structure envisaged in BDP’s 1 City strategy for Manchester. nor the aimless application of new technologies. But if design is the medium for discourse on the city, what should good city planning seek to achieve? > © Rigamondis | Dreamstime.com THOUGHT PIECE ONE | megacities M ore metro than macro – the economic potential of the city. The Shanxi Broadcast & TV Centre will form one of the focal points of the emerging Jinyang Lake Commercial District in Taiyuan, China. The masterplan design is a careful balance of the site’s massing, topography, water features, scale and viewpoints. Deyan Sudjic has likened the city to a forcefield, one in which mobility and ideas are the energy of the city flowing through the network within which a burst of energy can occur apparently randomly, a catalyst for development. Daniel Libeskind has, similarly, talked about the city being not a two dimensional grid to be filled but being defined by spatial peaks and valleys, a way of representing the mix and intensity of uses. As such, cities should be planned to foster creativity by maximising the potential for human interaction and the exchange of ideas, and to capture the results for the benefit of the city and its citizens. Cities bring opportunities for wealth generation and for creative inspiration than can result only from face-to-face contact with others. In fact the crush of people living in close quarters fosters the kind of collaborative creativity that has produced some of humanity’s best ideas, including the industrial revolution and the digital age. Edward Glaeser in his recent book ‘Triumph of the City’ similarly views the city from the opposite end of the telescope from Howard, regarding urbanisation not as a source of blight, but of vitality and opportunity, where the absence of space between people reduces costs so enabling cities to produce more and critically, allowing a flow of ideas. Richard Florida also has highlighted the flow of ideas - creativity – as the lifeblood of the economy and of the unique juxtapositions of place and people that urbanisation creates and that allow ideas to develop and form. Furthermore urbanisation brings about face-toface encounters, enabling people to learn from one another. No technology yet invented allows people to pick up the contextual cues - the frantic texting mid conversation, or the glazed eyes, for example, that suggests we’ve lost the listener - that enable us to develop ideas and do business. The notion of the urban forcefield, allied to a BDP understanding of urban placemaking, creates a framework for evaluating and designing cities and places that is less a simple response to issues of urban capacity, less infrastructure and technology led and more based on the rationale of cities and why they work. Facilitating human interaction and urban exchange is as relevant a model for the city and for If economy and environment are the first two pillars This means planning decades ahead, identifying and economic development today and in tomorrow’s cities of sustainability, then the third is society. We need to reserving land for community uses, for civic spaces as it was for Vitruvius in the Roman forum. manage rapid urbanisation to maximise economic and for shared transport, treating the expanding city success, use resources sustainably and spread the as a resource to be organised and tapped, not merely he city as the solution to global economic, benefit and opportunity to all in society. Future cities housed. Far-sighted city leaders in fast growing cities environmental and social challenges. need to develop passionate democratic participation in the 19th and early 20th centuries, like Paris, Barcelona Urbanisation has to be viewed hand in to create the kinds of public spaces and living areas and Chicago, built new ‘pieces’ of city to cope with the hand with economic development. From an that allow all of their residents to pursue their own growth, rather than allowing sprawl to take charge. economic perspective, cities bring people and goods dreams. Libeskind argues that his is no utopian ideal Such approaches have proved to be robust and closer together, help overcome information gaps but a precondition for the creation of a meaningful resilient. and enable idea flows. In excess of 95% of global future for cities. T GDP is now generated in urban areas. Certainly it has the environment to feed the city and, on the other, a T source of increasing pollution. and our ability to get it right. been easier to understand why economists have embraced cities as engines of prosperity rather than environmentalists, for whom urbanisation has been seen as, on the one hand, forcing the denudation of Cities can in fact play a vital role in cutting carbon Rapid urbanisation also means that holding onto key concepts like community and designing at the scale of he accelerating pace of change. the neighbourhood is more important than ever, whilst Cities seem to be growing faster than ever bringing forward urban transit solutions for necessary before. The debate about megacities should trips within megacities, enabling the growth of polycentric therefore be less a concern about supersize urban areas. cities and more a concern about the pace of change Without good planning and urban design cities will Equally a concern with the quality of design of residential environments needs to return to the fore, to bring the qualities of space and community that meet human needs and desires, to make the city the destination of choice as well as opportunity. emissions whilst remaining the engines of the economy. simply sprawl. Already most cities spread faster than Much has been done to develop the model eco-city, people move into them; on average cities get 2% less though these are more laboratory than blueprint. dense each year, driven by cheap transportation and Compact, relatively densely occupied cities with rising incomes. The World Bank estimated that urban mixed-use urban forms are far more resource efficient population grew by 5% between 1990 and 2000 but that than any other settlement pattern. And green cities urban areas grew by 30%. As Howard recognised people can further improve social equity and quality of life, like homes and gardens so, without denying people for example through enhanced public transport that what they want, we have to develop new city districts both improves access to public services and reduces proactively, to create the living environments around the process of design of the city. The sheer pace congestion. Per capita, the urban population treads sustainable infrastructure to add positively to the city of development in increases the importance of more lightly on the earth than its rural counterparts; rather than to allow suburbia to spread like an oil slick. collaborative design and efficiency of design process dense urban infrastructure is more efficient, more and solutions, bringing new working practices like suitable for smart technologies and urban housing takes less energy to heat, cool and light. > There is a role for technological innovation in Building Information Modelling (BIM) to the fore. > THOUGHT PIECE ONE | megacities S olution City. Urbanisation is widespread, proceeding at pace and will be with us for the next 100 years. Even when population growth tails off in China, then India and finally the African countries, the rural migration to the cities is likely to be ongoing. Megacities are inescapable, but they also represent a great opportunity. Urban planning and design will be integral to our ability to maximise the benefits of urban living, particularly if we can ensure a collaborative and holistic approach to global social, economic and environmental challenges in the Solution City. A latter day Ebenezer Howard, a fusion of tweed and iPad, might grumble and remind us of the pitfalls of urban living. But for all his suspicion of urbanisation, even Howard understood the magic of cities. Best C known for promoting the avowedly anti-urban Garden ities 2013. The mistake that architects made a Fourthly, cities must be liberally endowed with century ago was to envisage the city of the sources of ideas and creativity, as universities and future in terms of aesthetics. Such a view, is research facilities are often the starting point of doomed to failure. The key is to begin to understand a entrepreneurship and economic success. The focus city not just in physical terms – and even then to think should not be on managing city decline but on primarily in terms of density, intensity and use rather reinvention. Not all planners have grasped this and in than aesthetics – but also in terms of its social and places governments have pushed construction and economic framework. infrastructure projects which are not fixes for decline, There follow some principles which designers can however helpful they might be once renaissance is apply to urban development: underway. First and foremost, however big the city gets, the The fifth principle is that urban-rural dichotomies are building block is the neighbourhood / community. This counterproductive. Think instead of an integrated very human scale has been forgotten in some of the system and mutual dependency. There is much talk more triumphalist visions of new cities. of ‘closed’ systems, but there is also a misconception Secondly, whether the subject is the growth of an that these have to be limited, contiguous urban existing city or a completely new city, there is always a areas. A closed system can just as easily extend to the context. This context ensures that the urban forcefield resource hinterland of rural areas. Cities allow half of sparks in subtly different ways in different places. humanity to live on around 4% of the potential arable Context delivers uniqueness, uniqueness underpins land, leaving more space for open country and food differentiation. Distinctiveness will arise naturally production. In fact the highly popular ‘back-to-the from context, so the urban solution will be based on land’ environmentalists’ ethic and weekend homes , understanding of culture and place. both characteristic of wealthy societies and elites, is Thirdly, successful cities will be polycentric and highly damaging to the prospects of long term global therefore growth should deliver new loci, new pieces sustainability. of the city, not mono-functional retail districts or And finally, technology must be subservient to human commuter suburbs. This is not the same as saying endeavour, not a solution looking for a problem. There that every addition to the city has to be self contained has been an explosion of data in recent times, with – cities function and economies grow because wider access than ever before, brought about by the of interaction – but city growth should always be speed, capacity and social nature of data networks. positively driven, not simply as management of Technology companies are good at finding new problems. Periodically this requires the city leaders ways of managing data, enabling existing systems to take bold moves to set a framework and new to work more efficiently and are desperate to find direction, thus city development is episodic, a commercial applications. But however ‘smart’ a city circadian cycle of planning and delivery. is technologically, the successful city is one that uses technology as part of the solution, not the end in itself. The relationship between nature and the city underpins our vision for the Qingdao Westcoast Masterplan. The natural beauty of the site nestled between the mountains and the coast provides an opportunity to create a destination for business, tourism and sustainable living. Times Square, New York © Brett Critchley | Dreamstime.com City, he nevertheless once wrote of London; ‘The crowded streets – the signs of wealth and prosperity – the bustle – the very confusion and disorder appealed to me, and I was filled with delight.’ He should have followed his heart. n The crowded streets – the signs of wealth and prosperity – the bustle – the very confusion and disorder appealed to me, and I was filled with delight.” thought piece two | it’s not what you buy, but the way that you buy it... m New visitor attractions in retail centres; an aquarium at Forum Istanbul An increase in housing and commercial uses will also help to increase dwell time and bring the community back to the city centre. These activities are bringing a quality of experience unique to and reflecting the culture and character of a location. Good quality public spaces and public realm raise the quality of the whole area and provide an attractive environment to which consumers will want to return. BDP’s scheme in the heart of Mayfair and Belgravia has not only transformed this part of London but has also contributed to increased footfall and spend. words | TESSA O’NEILL Other parts of our cities such as public transport hubs at train stations and airports, traditionally not classed as retail destinations, will respond to the customer’s desire for greater convenience due to time and lifestyle pressures. WiFi will become a must have so shoppers can surf the web, use social media and Nanjing Road, Shanghai m The dynamic retail sector is going through its most whether they shop on line or in store, customers also significant period of transition in a century. The want convenience, choice, great service and an current global financial crisis is having a major impact enjoyable experience. on people’s spending and shopping habits. However, other significant trends are also shaping how and reinventing themselves and becoming more than just where we shop with a correspondingly inevitable places to shop. Gone are the days of inward looking impact on our cities. shopping centres reflecting little of the character and personality of the city. Whilst in certain environments The biggest influence by far on the way people Many city centres and shopping destinations are shop is the shift towards e-commerce, m-commerce around the world there is still a case for covered (sales made via smartphones) and s-commerce malls these too should reflect the nature of their (sales made through social media). This is a new and surroundings. New centres are increasing the diversity unpredicted phenomenon even 10 years ago. of their leisure offer with cafes, bars and restaurants, We have seen dramatic changes in retail patterns and and there is a very tangible advantage when habits, over a very short timescale. customer dwell time is extended by visiting cinemas, ice-rinks and cultural activities such as museums and It is the experience of going shopping that is driving the retail sector. The customer knows what he or she wants. Value for money is still a factor but, art galleries. Whilst each is very different in scale and location, new integrated retail centres such as the BDP designed Newbury Parkway, UK and Nanjing Road, Shanghai, China have the same design ethos of creating a total experience in order to compete with other retail destinations and the internet. even work while spending time in a centre. > A revitalised public realm at Elizabeth Street, Belgravia, London thought piece two | it’s not what you buy, but the way that you buy it... 5004 0506 > NikeTown, London Newbury Parkway Fritz Hansen Showroom, London m Shops, however, are most vulnerable to the goods and also the green credentials of the shop or increased use of the internet and they too will play centre. The BDP designed Waitrose store in Bracknell a very different role in the future. Many will operate achieved BREEAM Outstanding and incorporates as little more than showrooms, others as collection green roofs and a biomass centre but also innovative centres or customer service hubs. The store of the ideas such as a bug hotel which has proved a popular future will no longer act as a traditional retail store but attraction in its own right! as an experience in its own right and also a showcase for coveted global brands. The Nike or Fritz Hansen world, the common thread linking these changes is the stores, for example, display and light their products in quality of experience, in terms of the quality of service a way that provides an experience for the consumer and the quality of the space. The city centre has been the that captures the imagination of that retailer’s focus for our urban communities for centuries and it will demographic. continue to be but it will develop as a very different place to the one we know now, much strengthened by current Sustainability too is ever more important to the consumer, relative both to the provenance of the Whatever scale of shopping place and wherever in the changes in the approach to retailing. n Waitrose, Bracknell and ‘bug hotel’ (far right) thought piece three | lessons from the moai O ur cities are our future. By 2030 60% of the world’s population will live in urban words | STEVE MERRIDEW areas.(ref 1) Global economic growth and rising population levels make the old economic concept of scarcity more pertinent to the future of our cities than ever: infinite wants versus finite resources. What’s more, the short-termism of our political systems and the reliance on consumerism to feed our economies has led to a failure to address the externalities of many of our activities. We believe designers, planners and engineers have a key role in resetting the balance. As shapers of places and designers of systems, we can influence our future, and in so doing learn the lessons of history. The world’s cities occupy just 2% of the earth’s land but account for 60-80% of energy consumption and 75% of carbon emissions. Most humans have an almost infinite capacity for taking things for granted. That men do not learn much from the lessons is the most important of all the lessons of history.” Rapid urbanisation is exerting pressure on fresh water supplies, sewage, the living environment and public health. Aldous Huxley © Matthew Wood thought piece three | lessons from the moai thought piece three | lessons from the moai Blackburn Meadows With cities accounting for 60 – 80% of global energy consumption, we need to find ways of generating and delivering their energy from sustainable and renewable sources. The 30MW renewable energy plant will produce enough power for around 40,000 homes by converting recycled waste wood into electricity. There are also opportunities to supply heat to neighbouring commercial developments, further boosting energy yield from the waste wood. The Blackburn Meadows Plant forms part of Sheffield’s drive to be energy self sufficient. Heathrow Airports Group Setting the Level of Environmental Ambitions We have been working with Heathrow to set their Environmental Ambitions for their 2014 – 2019 Construction Implementation Plan. It’s a globalised world - without connections, cities will decline. We need to reduce the footprint of resources consumed in connecting us. We are assisting HAG in delivering this future. Manchester Town Hall and Central Library Transformation Project The transformation project will significantly reduce energy demand, leading to a 44% reduction in CO2 emissions. The project forms part of a local district energy cluster. For cities to thrive they need to be connected. Connections facilitate the spread of knowledge, commerce and innovation. Much of the savings are through engineering design but the project will also engage in a post occupancy programme. The programme will work with users and visitors to stimulate behaviour change and minimise energy demands. ‘Coping with the growing needs of water and sanitation services within cities is one of the most pressing issues of this century. Sustainable, efficient and equitable urban water management has never been as important as in today’s New buildings only account for 1% of the UK stock per annum. We must meet the refurbishment challenge. world’ (ref 2) Glencorse Water Treatment Works, Edinburgh The project provides clear fresh drinking water for the city of Edinburgh and has been awarded the Chartered Institute of Water and Environmental Management’s World of Difference prize. The scheme sits naturally within its environment and through its processes utilises hydroelectric power to treat the water. Cities are playing an increasingly important role in the global debate about food security and sustainability, a trend that is clearly set to continue as the world’s population becomes ever more urbanised (ref 3) Manchester Garden City As part of the Manchester Garden City Initiative, we have provided city centre residents with grow boxes which function as temporary urban allotments. In © Ian Simpson Architects the future, pilot schemes such as this must become much more mainstream as we tackle the global food challenge. References 1. United Nations Sustainable Development Platform 2. Water and Cities Facts and Figures - UN-Water Decade Programme on Advocacy and Communication 3. Cardiff University’s Sustainable Places Research Institute - Urban Food Strategies thought piece four | old buildings - new life Old buildings new life words | TIM LEACH 2013 23 Review twenty thirteen T he richness and diversity of our towns and of building types ensures that the majority of these cities create a visually stimulating, culturally buildings will remain standing for many years to come. rich sense of place, providing continuity Redevelopment provides only limited possibilities in and stability in a fast changing world. The addressing the future viability of our built environment. juxtaposition of buildings and spaces of all ages, styles and character makes a significant contribution in investment that the existing built environment creating these unique places. represents is the challenge for this and future generations. Providing a new vision for the role old Whilst a small percentage of these buildings and Utilising the economic, environmental and social environments are recognised for their significance and buildings - historic or from the 20th century - play protected through statutory legislation the substantive in providing high quality, sustainable environments number are of more modest qualities, designed for communities, commerce and culture is crucial in for a particular purpose and constructed using the delivering specific targets for carbon reduction and in technologies of the time. The scale of this environment, meeting the broader challenges of the sustainability the number of individual buildings and broad range agenda. > Somerset House and King’s College London creative adaptation of Grade I listed and late 20th century twenty thirteen 24 buildings, designed to achieve BREEAM Excellent in this sensitive historic context. thought piece four | old buildings - new life Oldham Town Hall One of a number of projects to secure the long term, viable use of civic buildings, accommodating new commercial activities whilst maintaining civic use. “Each hamlet or village or town should be a place, its own place. This is not a matter of fake historicism or artsy-craftsy architecture. It is a matter of respect for things existing, subtle patterns of place woven from vistas and street widths and the siting and colour and scale of stores, houses, and trees.” Robert Riley Unlocking latent potential... Creative adaptation generates users and visitor Enhancing space... Engineering sustainable environments... Old buildings and spaces, imaginatively reused, have attractions, facilitates development of adjacent With many alterations undertaken over time, old Integrating lean, clean and green strategies in old a unique character, combining the convenience buildings and spaces, and provides the seed for wider, buildings and estates often lack a sense of cohesion, buildings to reduce energy consumption, generate of the present with the qualities of the past. These sustainable regeneration. organisational clarity and spatial efficiency. Owners energy efficiently and utilise renewable energy buildings enjoy the added value generated by their are often unable to recognise an old building’s requires creative solutions that respond to their special sense of place. Spatial qualities, structure and urban quarter often necessitates phased regeneration. potential, seeing only the inconveniences created specific attributes, construction, materials, spatial materials, combined with historic associations create A masterplan provides the development framework by organic, incremental growth and its negative characteristics and embodied energy. an environment which is neither better nor worse than to guide this regeneration, mapping sequential impact on the quality and efficiency of space. new development – but uniquely different. improvements to deliver an overall vision whilst Creative adaptation generates a significant increase corresponding opportunities need to be understood achieving viable, beneficial use with each phase. in the quality and quantum of space, together with and creatively exploited to meet evolving standards in enhancements in current and future efficiency, energy consumption and carbon reduction for overall New interventions within existing buildings generate a sense of change, an injection of new life into the The scale of an individual building, built estate or The intrinsic qualities of existing buildings and old. A creative adaptation transforms any perception Creating value... flexibility and adaptability. sustainability. Achieving high levels of environmental that these existing buildings are tired, unsuitable for Old buildings and spaces generate romantic effectiveness and successfully integrating services current use and serve no future purpose. Creating sympathies; sound and sustained use secures their and servicing through creative adaptation, measured within existing buildings requires highly creative and, exciting and attractive spaces and enhancing long term future. Adaptive reuse ensures a building removal and selective extension maximises a often bespoke, design solutions. n efficiency and flexibility unlock the latent value – meets the needs of new and future occupiers. building’s utilisation and efficiency. Identifying the environmental, economic and social - embodied Interventions, however, need to be measured to opportunities for creating new space through more within a building’s structure. secure long term financial sustainability whilst extensive development assists in securing the overall ensuring a building’s intrinsic qualities are retained. potential and viability of these buildings. Facilitating regeneration... Balancing the scale of change and its corresponding Reusing old buildings provides a catalyst for wider value is crucial in identifying appropriate, beneficial urban regeneration, with the impact of change use. New use may require only limited adaptation or often extending beyond the footprint of any single necessitate radical reordering. Understanding the building. New, outward facing activities engage with qualities of an existing building and its capacity to the immediate setting, animate the public realm and accommodate change - what is, or is not, viable - is contribute positively to a building’s broader context. critical in managing this balance. Clonmel, Tipperary Creative adaptation of the former Kickham Barracks to create a new civic space, the seomra mo’r or great room at the centre of a mixed use development in the heart of the town. Rationalising existing space, its use, arrangement Haggerston Baths, London Initial proposals for a centre for healthy living, introducing a range of new, complementary uses into the reordered listed building. Creative adaptation breathes new life into old buildings, creating inspiring, functional and sustainable places to meet the challenging demands of existing and new use. thought piece five | a cultural heart A cultural Heart words | RICHARD MCDOWELL I t could be said that one way of assessing a society’s degree of civilisation is the extent to which it invests in cultural activities and the type of these activities it promotes. Expressing and celebrating the indigenous cultures within a city both increases confidence and strengthens national and individual identity. BDP has designed numerous significant cultural buildings over its 50 years. Many of these have been in central locations within well established and historic cities whether reworkings of existing facilities, such as the British Museum and Royal Albert Hall in London, or new build projects, such as the Perth Concert Hall. They have all been designed to respond specifically to their existing cultural and physical contexts. Others have been conceived as regeneration projects where the power of a cultural offer to entice the public back into long forgotten areas has been successfully harnessed such as at the Glasgow Science Centre or Chatham Historic Dockyard. Yet other projects have had even higher aspirations and, in so doing have seen cultural buildings chosen specifically as keystone civic projects in the development of new cities in previously “A cheerful intelligent face is the end of culture, and success enough. For it indicates the purpose of Nature and wisdom attained” unoccupied regions of the world. One recent example of the latter is BDP’s Sabah Al Ahmad City Cultural Centre in southern Kuwait. In developing the brief for this new city, the Kuwaiti State recognised not only the importance that an understanding of a nation’s cultural heritage plays in empowering the individual but also the ability of such facilities to bind a potentially heartless new city together physically and socially. > Sabah Al Ahmad City Cultural Centre, Kuwait. Ralph Waldo Emerson culture | wisdom | happiness Review 2013 28 twenty thirteen thought piece five | a cultural heart In our view however, it is not so much the building that forms the heart of the city but the central garden space within it which will make this building particularly successful. This oasis is accessible via deeply cut ravines which ramp down through the heavy stone plinth of the centre providing a cool shaded approach to the generous gardens beyond. Enclosed and climatically controlled to provide shelter from the heat and sand storms of the desert, this space provides a unique green and lush environment where people from the city will be able to come together and interact, whether using the associated cultural facilities or not. The Sabah Al Ahmad City Cultural Centre responds to the dual, sometimes conflicting, needs to function as an architectural reference point on a city scale while at the same time providing a place of a human scale. BDP’s proposals capture the dynamism and energy of the performing arts and music whilst at the same time providing cool calm relaxation and contemplation areas of unique scale and lushness. In doing so the centre forms a true heart space within the new city. This new heart is founded on the promotion of culture, arts and literature symbolising not just a cultural but a national rebirth and creating a true cultural oasis in the desert. n Cities, by their very nature, are complex organisms which generally evolve gradually over many years. As such the key challenges for BDP of the Sabah Al Ahmad City Cultural Centre project were to bring this sense of place and identity to an area which until recently was nothing but desert. 1. 3. Creating a rooted intervention of this scale, 2. whilst maintaining a humanistic approach is a complex challenge culturally, architecturally and environmentally. In undertaking such a task it is imperative to distinguish between the historic, heritage aspect of a nation’s culture which by its very nature provides a retrospective view and the potentially 12. 4. 10. conflicting desire to promote and develop a nation’s 13. popular culture looking forward. This dichotomy is perhaps best captured in our client’s description of 9. the building as a ‘cultural mall.’ It is this tension and the energy inherent in 5. 11. juxtaposing the past, present and future that we have sought to capture in the architectural expression of the Cultural Centre. The aim is to create a sense of permanence and timeless yet dynamic and forward 8. 7. 6. looking facility in which the residents of Kuwait can develop and reinforce their understanding of their own cultural identity and ultimately contribute back into it. 29 twenty thirteen twenty thirteen 30 thought piece six | greening the city words | DARRELL WILSON At the intimate scale, our involvement in groundbreaking GREENING initiatives like Manchester Garden City, Dig the City and THE CITY multifaceted, community owned natural landscape at Peckham Charrettes has embraced a proactive bottom up approach with communities at the core, increasing the awareness and capacity of nature in the city. One exciting vision is to transform Castlefield Viaduct, a beautiful, disused relic of the Victorian steam age into a the heart of cultural Manchester. Chavasse Park at Liverpool One demonstrates an innovative approach to the provision of open space in the heart of Liverpool’s retail district by placing a 2 hectare park above four levels of a new city centre car park. This takes the concept of a green roof to a new height! The idea of ‘greening the city’ has become synonymous with initiatives that increase and enhance the quality and content of nature and the environment within our towns and cities. Along with slogans like ‘Green Infrastructure’ and ‘Green Economy’, the green agenda is at the forefront of government policy across “To the eyes of the man of imagination nature is imagination itself” Chavasse Park, Liverpool One william blake the globe -‘green is definitely the new black’. However, does the term ‘greening’ go far enough to describe the importance that is placed on nature, the landscape and the environment as custodians of our society for future generations? T he symbiotic relationship between urban BDP is at the cutting edge of this debate creating development and landscape holds a places which not only embrace the beauty and promising future in determining the success spiritual value of nature but also appreciate the of our cities. Continued long-term investment unique context of time and the value that it brings to in restoring and reconnecting natural resources into landscapes ensuring that they evolve and mature the heart of urban life is the key. This is envisioned gracefully. through the creation of revitalised river systems, parks and open space networks, supporting natural systems evolving fabric of differently scaled interactive natural, such as flood control, biodiversity and ecologies, and landscape spaces, all connected together and our preserving existing ecosystems and topographies. work forming different pieces of that fabric. > We see the idea of a living ‘green’ city as being an Castlefield Viaduct Manchester thought piece six | greening the city “study nature, love nature, stay close to nature. It will never fail you” Ladywell Fields London Frank Lloyd Wright Xi’an Jiaotong-Liverpool University, Suzhou Alder Hey Hospital Liverpool In 2003, mental illness was estimated as a £77.4 billion the health economic benefits of trees in removing In the UK, the Environment Agency revealed the cost of It was suggested by CABE that ‘switching public welfare loss to the UK. Evidence suggests that access quantities of O₃, PM₁₀, NO₂, SO₂ and has encouraged environmental damage from polluted urban wash-off spending to schemes such as trees, parks, green to the natural environment promotes recovery from green spaces and extensive tree planting as one part had been estimated at £150-£250 m. Urban trees, SUDS roofs and waterways would address climate change stress and fatigue and improves wellbeing. In the of the solution. The goal is that a resident will never be systems and green roofs retain rainwater thereby more effectively, improve public health and improve Alder Hey Hospital project there is a blurring of the more than 500 m from a green space and since 2000, reducing peak run off. They also filter water effectively communities.’ boundaries between landscape and architecture with the city’s green areas have risen from 36% to just over and reduce the threat of flooding. The innovative the new hospital building located within an existing 50%. BDP’s masterplanning in China places landscape project at Ladywell Fields, London, transformed a park moving from theoretical to practical means of public park. The form of the building allows the at the very heart of design. Examples of this are disconnected by a channelised river into a natural responsibly and consciously placing the value of landscape to wrap over it creating a series of green competition winning designs such as Xi’an Jiaotong- flowing environmental asset with the river at the nature at the heart of design. Techniques are being roofs, whilst the fingers of the building open out and Liverpool University, Suzhou, and Suzhou Exhibition heart. The key to the project’s success was looking adopted that ensure future development secures the create views into the park. Centre, where the architecture has been shaped cohesively at the whole site and working with nature. significance of our natural environments by creating around well designed and distinctive landscapes which The resulting benefits include reduced flood risk, healthier places that boost the quality of life for all. n with levels of nitrogen dioxide, sulphur dioxide and create cooled spaces, sweetened air and dappled value for money, new connections along the river and suspended particulate matter that are all above the sunlight. Such places will grow, evolve and mature over a strong new identity for the area, creating one of index averages. The local government has recognised time bestowing improved value in future years. London’s hidden rural gems. In Beijing, air quality has posed challenges, Encouragingly, professional place makers are thought piece seven | community and identity De Gerrit Komrij College, Netherlands Atrium view COMMUNITY & IDENTITY words | CHRIS HARDING T he concept of community is as old as civilisation itself. More than a practical necessity, it is fundamental to our happiness and contentment. We can imagine what the world might be like in 2050 (try a ‘future planet’ search on Google for a spectrum of scenarios), and when I see my 14 year old son socialising with his friends on the Xbox, it gives me a glimpse of the future we are headed for. But in a changing world it will be even more important for designers to satisfy the human necessity for a sense of identity and community in the future places we create. Our vision statement of creating places for people unites everyone in BDP because it places the user at the centre of our thinking ensuring an interest in activity and a sense of connection and relationship with our surroundings - and the planet. This is the inspiration for our socially progressive design collective, where architects, engineers and related design disciplines can work together to meet societal challenges. Collaboration is the lynchpin of this endeavour. As designers we spend our lives thinking about the places we create and to do it well it is essential that we behave as a community ourselves, supporting each other and fostering our own creativity – the most valuable commodity that people pay us for. Collaboration is a growing phenomenon. The most powerful advocacy for this can be seen in the drive by the world’s leading research universities to foster, what Professor Nigel Slater, Head of the Chemical Engineering and Biotechnology Research Centre at Cambridge, calls ‘social promiscuity’. BDP is uniquely organised to provide a socially promiscuous context to stimulate creativity in the pursuit of places genuinely shaped around the human wellbeing. This unity of vision makes us a community with a strong identity ourselves. Urbanisation is a growing phenomenon and thinking in an integrated way is the prerequisite of a civilised society. It is increasingly important for designers to dovetail life’s activities into a coherent and sustainable whole. > 35 twenty thirteen thought piece seven | community and identity Music Boxes, Manchester Alder Hey Children’s Hospital, Liverpool BDP’s interdisciplined, multi sector and multi in shaping their community. location approach creates an infrastructure Discussions are about the for us to do it well. Armed with the experiences issues that affect everyday life of Liverpool One, a herculean collaboration and solutions emanate from and the only city scale masterplan ever to them. In the same way, our be shortlisted for the Stirling Prize, BDP is project for the world famous collaborating with Manchester City Council Alder Hey Children’s Hospital to stimulate fresh thinking about the way the in Liverpool shows the benefit city can develop in the future. of designers striking up a Deliberately provocative and meaningful conversation with unfettered by self generated a city community that boasts constraints, we have taken a a very proud sense of identity. radical and fresh look at the Everyone understands that the way the world’s first industrial project is a focal point for the city can develop in the future. community and needs to reflect Ideas rich, this collaboration is the character of the city and its people. So the antithesis of insular thinking we talked with everyone, to make sure the and at its core realises cities are identity of the building sprang from the ecosystems to be looked at in people who use and operate it. The result is an integrated way. The outputs an exciting beacon of wellbeing organised are a wonderfully stimulating around a family friendly social street, vision and the activities which where all the activities flow and connect weave it together. Collaboration with the city park. and holistic thinking is the essence of sustainable Our curiosity about activity and experience and communities at any scale. meaningful engagement with users, operators and Being interested in community focused outcomes financiers allows us to look at things in a fundamental means architects should work in a collaborative way. Forward looking clients are looking for fresh way. A user centred approach depends on a good thinking at the all important starting point, where conversation with those who commission, use or have preconception and closed minds can be a real barrier an interest in the places being created. At Tollgate to progress. The top research universities understand Gardens in London, BDP is working with residents, this and are setting visions for the future of scientific planners and developers to create a cohesive vision for research, dismantling the straightjacket effect of inner city living. We bring working models and sketches their existing estates and creating new blended to weekly workshops to illuminate this important space concepts to support world class collaborative dialogue. It is our way of fostering a social and research programmes. > The output is a wonderfully stimulating vision and the activity threads which weave it together. Collaboration and holistic thinking is the essence of sustainable communities at any scale. creative environment for real people to play a real role twenty thirteen 38 thought piece seven | community and identity University of York Masterplan, Concept overview from Lakehouse T he ‘hubs’ we have created in our studios are Perhaps the most interesting thing about cities is that just the kind of places that can foster creative designers have an opportunity to think about the fusion because they are a part of our working creative use of space, or as we put it ‘thinking laterally lives. They are where together we meet, talk, and vertically’. Hampden Gurney School in London eat, watch and listen – all good news for our creative is a tour de force in urban school design. It shows thinking. Of course the trick is to get the design right you can make the impossible not only possible but so that it is as popular as a beautiful piazza in an delightful too. Organising a school vertically (rather Italian hill town. At B&Q’s new Store Support Office than horizontally as is the norm) brings a wonderful in Hampshire, UK we created our own version of opportunity to strengthen a sense of community, not the Italian piazza; a new place to foster a sense of least for the simple reason that people are closer community and identity. Everyone passes through it, together. This approach is increasingly recognised shares it and owns it. And like any good piazza it’s not as sustainable because it uses less of the earth’s just one big space but enjoys a variety of places to sit, surface, lifting people into the light, air and views. It contemplate, converse and to glimpse the activities is producing some of our best buildings across all throughout the building. Using these types of spaces sectors. Of course it is important we do not simply unlocks the potential of people because they behave create big blocks which blight their surroundings and like a community. ignore the user experience, until that is, you get to the penthouse. But we have probably only scratched Of course, the essence of any good piazza is microclimate. How often we sit in wonderful multi the surface with vertical mixed use buildings, which generational spaces which are the hub of their become sociable human scale communities in their communities when we are on holiday, either in the sun own right and which make a positive contribution or shade depending on the climate and time of year. to their ecosystems. This is a message we must take And by contrast we experience some of the disastrous across the rapidly developing planet. spaces urban planners and designers concoct in our cities today, overshadowed and windswept – unloved and unused. At Appleton Academy, a new build academy in Bradford, the school is wrapped around a sheltered garden to create a welcoming micro- A climate at the heart of the school and the urban t the University of Cambridge, this approach The new route breaks the building into human sized has been described as social engineering, parts around a piazza where you can enjoy pastries because our designs affect the way the made by the students, watch trainee mechanics at activities of research communities interact. work, discuss training and education across a wide community it serves. The space and activities around it are like a microcosm of a city because they work together and relate strongly to each other; sheltering from wind and catching the sun – a focal venue for the constantly changing things going on in and around it. For example, the design for the new Chemical spectrum of life skills, or just hang out and watch the Engineering and Biotechnology Building has come out world go by in a comfortable and welcoming place. And when we began sketching the major expansion In other words this is a real place where people want to be. More and more education buildings are breaking down barriers, engaging the community they serve in a way relevant to real lives. northern European setting meant we wanted to catch at Gerrit Komrij College in the Netherlands, the town Working with people and focusing on creating positive into the skip it sat on a sunny spot on the pavement wanted its new college to integrate seamlessly with its experiences is the essence of creating human scale community. So we set a public route through the heart places. I have yet to see anyone’s creative capacities of the building, magically dissolving the institutional diminish in convivial surroundings. Commercial feel prevalent in many education buildings, forging a organisations are increasingly realising the benefit strong physical connection with the town itself. of promoting a strong sense of community through of a continuous dialogue with the users and operators. We encouraged them to consider what they want to do rather than what they want. This bottom up activity-led design approach avoids a preoccupation with fashion or style and produces buildings which work well and look good. Education is at the heart of any community and their workplace design. The multinational corporation Apple understands this to the extent that everything is subservient to the big idea of creating a central place in their new HQ in California. > of the University of York, climate was a key shaper. A low angle sunlight and protect against cold northerly winds; in other words create a positive microclimate to make the spaces around buildings enjoyable. I remember fondly the old sofa we threw out on a bright but crisp March morning. Before being tossed in front of the house for an hour or so. It became a gathering point for everyone in the street for the couple of hours it sat there, transforming behaviours in a very positive way. For a short while that sofa became the hub of my community. I am optimistic about our future. Exponential change is all around us and progress across the world is driving urbanisation. This is an unprecedented moment to develop sustainable infrastructure and technologies. With it comes a huge responsibility for designers to champion collaborative practice and environmental sensibility. Technology will move apace but we will see gathering momentum to support the idea of community and empowering people to work together and support each other. The finite planet will ultimately determine the way we behave and progressively people’s lives will be enriched by working in harmony with the environment and its valuable natural resources. The unfettered pursuit of self interest will lead to social decay. It is unsustainable and will not lead to a happy and contented society. Power to the people! n CHIEF EXECUTIVE’S REVIEW relevant section - xxxx the growth of urbanisation and the continued 2013 chief executive’s review renewal of towns and cities around the world will continue apace.” PETER DRUMMOND | CHIEF EXECUTIVE BDP is an international, interdisciplinary design firm. Like many in our industry, we have Because of BDP’s specialist expertise and experience faced many changes and challenges in the last clients from other parts of the world for these year. We are striving to make the most of the difficult particular building types, with projects in Scandinavia, economic context of the UK and Europe. This has Australia, Russia, Turkey and Thailand. tested our abilities to both secure and deliver projects in ever more competitive circumstances, whilst a turnover of over £65m, and we are planning for this aiming for excellence in both design and service to to grow over the next few years towards £80m. We also our clients. Our distinctive integrated design ethos, saw some changes in the senior leadership of BDP. regional strength, and collaborative approach have David Cash succeeded Tony McGuirk as Chairman, enabled us to retain a pre-eminent position in our with Tony continuing to lead a growing range of main areas of work – education, healthcare, retail and high quality housing and education projects. David, mixed use development, and masterplanning, and a director of BDP for over twenty years, has been to develop our capabilities in housing, transport and instrumental in the development of our international workplace. network, informing a clear vision of what it means to be able to operate as a leading design practice in Our continued investment in technology, especially in hospitals and retail development, we also attracted So 2012 was a year of contrasts. The firm achieved BIM (Building Information Modelling), is enabling many parts of the world. Heather Wells succeeded us to apply our talents to developing new ways of John Parker as Group Finance Director. translating and informing the creative process into the most informed, detailed, and coordinated levels growth of urbanisation and the continued renewal of information for analysis, project delivery, and of towns and cities around the world will continue integration with the construction industry. apace, as populations grow and demand amenity Beyond Western Europe, BDP’s studios in Abu and comfort from the places in which they live and as Dhabi, New Delhi, and Shanghai, continue to grow increasingly footloose investment can exploit a better in scale, strength and reputation. These new studios networked world to make development decisions are extending our approach to the provision of high based on quality of place, not just location. BDP’s quality social infrastructure such as schools, hospitals, ethos, now extended to a wider network of studios, is and universities as places of dramatic growth and perfectly suited to play a significant part in rising to change, along with new places to shop and work, and this challenge. n We look forward to 2013 with cautious optimism. The sustainable masterplans for the changing demographic needs. The focus of this work is founded on the user and community view of civilised urban living. City traffic © Alain Lacroix | Dreamstime.com on the boards | review of work on the boards The design for the masterplan for Samara, the sixth largest city in Russia, required a residential density of 500 apartments per hectare and a minimum four hectares of open green space. The solution is a series of landscaped courtyards focusing onto the central park, opening up views and enabling sunlight penetration. The competition winning Bispebjerg Hospital Masterplan in the northern part of Copenhagen is calm and accessible with landscape ribbons that knit into the existing historic urban grain. BDP has since been shortlisted for several Danish hospital competitions. BDP is part of a consortium which has been chosen by the London Fire Brigade as its PFI partner for a construction programme that will see nine ageing fire stations rebuilt across the capital, each of them targeting BREEAM Outstanding. Located on a gateway site, the Suzhou Dushu Lake Masterplan in China aims to strengthen transport links and access and provide an identity for this emerging residential district. At the heart of the scheme is an ecological park which connects to the waterfront. The International Quarter in London will be one of the UK’s largest mixed use developments, transforming the Olympic Park by creating a vibrant and dynamic commercial hub in the heart of Stratford City. Düsseldorf Ulmer Höh A competition winning design to redevelop a former prison site in Germany, and transform it into a lively city neighbourhood. In the forested hills of Kamand in the Himalayan region, the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) is creating a new campus on the outskirts of Mandi which will research innovative, environmentally sensitive products and processes for the development of the region. Our solution for the redevelopment of the Royal Sussex County Hospital site in Brighton fits a large scale development sensitively into its historic context. The topography is fully exploited with the ward accommodation looking over the English Channel. We are engineering the exemplar low carbon building the NRP (Norwich Research Park) Enterprise Centre which targets two of the most rigorous sustainable built environment standards, BREEAM Outstanding and Passivhaus Certification. on the boards | review of work ON THE BOARDs To showcase the University of Essex’s sustainable business strategies, the Business School is designed to be visibly sustainable from every angle, through its orientation on site, choice of materials, landscaping and passive engineering strategies. The Hongqiao Business District is a low rise development in Shanghai within a flexible mixed use, mixed density masterplan which allows for future growth, optimising the site’s natural and climatic assets. At Les Gargues, Aubagne to the east of Marseille, we prepared a new masterplan for a mixed use development of residential, retail and civic amenities on the outskirts of the town. The relocation of the prestigious primary and secondary Jumeirah College in Dubai for the charitable organisation GEMS Education will provide additional facilities for 2,300 students. The American School of Paris will provide a great 21st century learning environment while celebrating the wonderful parkland setting at Saint-Cloud in the western suburbs of Paris. This creative intervention to the Grade II listed Brown Hart Gardens substation in Mayfair is one of a number of schemes that BDP is involved with that will enhance the public realm of Grosvenor’s central London estate. GGB AWARD 2012 BEST DESIGNED PLACE AWARD COMMENDED The Grenfell Baines Best Building Award is presented 1. Victoria Hospital, Fife 3. Nirlon Knowledge Park, India to the best built project produced over the previous 12 “The serene atmosphere created in the wards will “Ground-breaking in the Indian market in valuing the months by one or other of BDP’s studios. It is named in surely improve patient wellbeing and recovery, role of high quality public realm and a masterplanning honour of the firm’s founder and the man whose vision whatever the medical condition.” approach as a way of creating a real place. A fun, we have become, Professor Sir George Grenfell Baines. GGB AWARD 2012 pleasant place to work – calming and supportive.” 2. Bathgate Library and Community Hub 1. Academy of Innovation & Research, CUC, Tremough; 2. Bathgate Partnership Centre, “This is a true interdisciplinary working, open and 4. The Learning Zone, Ebbw Vale West Lothian; 3. Bents Green School, Sheffield; 4. Crown Woods School, Greenwich; accessible; the miracle is how light penetrates the “A surprisingly impressive building and a full inter- 5. Gerrit Komrij School, Winterswijk; 6. High Storrs School, Sheffield; 7. Nirlon building given its deep plan form. A new focus for this disciplinary commission by BDP. Well laid out spaces Knowledge Park, India; 8. Parkway, Newbury; 9. Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Birmingham; community.” from the dramatic entrance to the great roof gardens with good acoustics, lighting and use of colour.” 10. Republic of Fritz Hansen, London; 11. The Learning Zone, Ebbw Vale; 12. Victoria Hospital, Fife; 13. Waitrose, Bracknell 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 1. 3. 2. 4. ggb award The Queen Elizabeth Hospital, winning project Birmingham “Whether on the curved wards, the outpatients’ department or the laboratories, the tremendous enthusiasm for this building and the pride shown by the staff there was truly wonderful to hear.” “A landmark building for the Midlands skyline. The huge scale of the development does not detract from the quality of the detailing.” relevant section - xxxx FEATURES | twenty thirteen Night scenes of high-density buildings © Nohead Lam | Dreamstime.com photographers David Barbour EDITORIAL Peter Durant David Cash Sanna Fisher-Payne Vanessa Brown Daniel Hopkinson Sheri Besford David Millington Helen Moorhouse Tim Soar Richard Dragun Dreamstime.com DESIGN Brett Critchley Lynda Athey City Co Paul Atkins Imrich Farkas John Beswick Alain Lacroix Matthew Wood - illustration Nohead Lam Rigamondis PRINTED BY Brown Knight & Truscott 51 Reviewthirteen 2013 twenty twenty thirteen 52