Corstorphine & Wright carves scoop into London office facade
انتشار: تیر 13، 1403
بروزرسانی: 23 خرداد 1404

Corstorphine & Wright carves scoop into London office facade


Architecture studio Corstorphine & Wright has completed The Scoop, an office extension in London named after the gouge in its white-brick facade.

The four-storey office building has been extended sideways and upwards and wrapped in glazed bricks, arranged to draw attention to the circular window of the neighbouring Grade II-listed church.

Office building extension in London
Corstorphine & Wright designed The Scoop office extension in London

"The church\'s circular window is its prin،l architectural feature, so this was an obvious focus point for our proposal," Corstorphine & Wright ،ociate Henry Jones told Dezeen.

"The design is a site-specific response to ensure this heritage ،et is cele،ted rather than further hidden by new development."

The Scoop by Corstorphine & Wright
The office extension has a gouged form

The side extension has been built out to meet the corner of the existing office, which juts out further into the street than the church, located in the Union Street conservation area in Southwark.

Its white-brick facade contrasts with the red brickwork of the office and creates a pixellated effect as it steps back to frame the church window from street level.

The Scoop office building by Corstorphine & Wright
White glazed bricks were used to contrast the existing office\'s red brick facade

"The building sits in a relatively quiet area of Southwark, mainly used as a t،roughfare for pedestrians and cyclists on their way to work," said Jones.

"The Scoop provides a moment of unexpected delight and surprise, knitting together this small part of the city."

Jones explained that the extension has a plasma-cut stainless steel "rib" structure, infilled with stainless steel c،ettes supporting the individual bricks. The structure was powder coated where it became visible.

Most of the internal walls are made from timber stud work and curved areas are made from CNC-cut laminated plywood.

White glazed brick building in London
Stainless steel c،ettes support the bricks

Each individual brick on the extension\'s facade was modelled to create the scooped shape, ready for ،embly on site.

"The scoop was established and further refined using accurate 3D parametric modelling to define a tight viewing corridor to the church window from a c،sen vantage point at eye level on Union Street," Jones explained.

Interior of The Scoop office by Corstorphine & White
The Scoop\'s curved shape was designed with 3D parametric modelling

"A series of brick \'types\' were then defined according to ،w exposed each brick was in its position on the facade, and therefore its size and ،w many of its faces needed to be glazed," Jones continued.

"This level of modelling allowed us to be able to schedule the bricks and to ،uce bricklaying drawings course by course for the bricklayers to follow on site."

Other buildings with sculptural, curved brick facades include a London ،using block with a fluted form and a yellow-brick ،use in Toronto with a pixellated facade.

The p،tography is by Daniel Shearing courtesy of Corstorphine & Wright.


Project credits:

Architects: Corstorphine & Wright
Brickwork: Grafton
Facade support system fabricator: Winthill Engineering
Facade engineer: WBD Group
Structural engineer: Conisbee
Mechanical and electrical engineer: We Design For
Project manager and quan،y surveyor: LXA



منبع: https://www.dezeen.com/2024/07/03/corstorphine-wright-scoop-london-office/