New York-based practice Grzywinski+Pons, led by Matthew Grzywinski and Amador Pons completed a hotel in East London for the Locke group, featuring an envelope with dark brick, and a crown with glass block walls.

Grzywinski+Pons follows a similar design to Locke's other hotels, however, the other Locke hotels are planned for long stays and Buckle Street Studios pays attention to short-stay guests.
The tower, designed by Grzywinski+Pons, is a 13-storey building in Aldgate East, an area that has become fashionable in recent years, featuring 103 rooms, a co-working space, with separate spaces for work and relaxation, a coffee shop, meeting rooms and a shop.

The façade combines soft dark brick with nickel-coated metal panels and interesting details such as rounded corners, cornices, window details, and a section of glass blocks at the top of the building creating the effect of a lantern.

Grzywinski+Pons designed the building, the interior and many of the furniture pieces.


Buckle Street Studios London by Grzywinski+Pons. Photograph by Nicholas Worley.
 


Buckle Street Studios London by Grzywinski+Pons. Photograph by Nicholas Worley.


Buckle Street Studios London by Grzywinski+Pons. Photograph by Nicholas Worley.
 

Project description by Grzywinski+Pons

Buckle Street Studios, located in the Aldgate East neighborhood of London, is a new thirteen-story building comprised of 103 compact apartments, a mezzanine co-working space, a coffee shop, meeting rooms, and a concept store. Grzywinski+Pons designed the building from the ground up as well as all of the interiors and much of the furniture.

The urban infill site is part of a dense and varied assemblage of buildings in both scale and style. Low-rise heritage structures sit directly adjacent to contemporary high-rises. During the planning process, we worked alongside the municipal authorities to ensure our design fulfilled the aspired role of architectural intermediary both in mass and articulation. Cognizant of our responsibility to consider the larger urban context of our site, we specified materials and defined our formal language to temper the architectonic jump from the smaller historic buildings to more recent tall developments.

We employed radiused corners and transferred much of the scheme’s structural load to an expressionistic double-height parabolic arch at grade to make the building sit softly within its block all the while drawing inspiration from the round-headed windows, arched cornices, and rounded quoins of the heritage buildings on the neighboring streets.

We decided to articulate our building’s mass in three sections. While the constraints of a small floor plate precluded actual formal setbacks, we employed dramatic but ordered material shifts throughout the building’s strata to define a pediment and crown. This tiered approach also allows the building to become more light and transparent as it rises.

The base of our building is clad in rusticated, nickel-finished metal panels composed in our modern take on a progressive ordered scale. The fenestration on all three building tiers is comprised of the same nickel finish metal and the coffered panels serve as spandrel covers and artful ventilation grilles while harmonizing the stratified facade.

Above this pediment, we used a warm grey hand-laid water-struck brick with projected soldier courses at the spandrels and a projected cornice below the material shift at the base of the crown. The brick spandrels and other transitional detailing imbue the already richly textured skin with even more depth.

The diaphanous crown of the building was designed to be equally proportionate to the base and is clad completely in a glass block. We specified a winged block (the wings serve to hide the grout joints) that is thermally efficient, beautifully luminous, and like the brick below, has texture, gravity, and permanence. The subtle, diffuse luminance of the rooms when lit from within softly animates the crown. The volume feels solid and ephemeral all at the same time and the activation of the interior spaces by residents yields a naturally kinetic glow.

For maximum thermal and acoustic efficiency, the crown’s envelope is a twin-wall assembly with the outer skin acting as both spandrel and parapet. We raised the parapet wall to completely cover all of the equipment on the roof while its translucency generates a diffuse and gentle termination of the top of the building into the sky.

Being able to design the exterior and interior simultaneously afforded us a great opportunity to capitalize on architectural advantages we created and curate a truly integrated experience from within and without.

In the public spaces of the project, this integration from the inside out is fundamental. The principle organizing element of these areas is the parabolic arch. Legible from the street through expansive glazing, it also supports and defines the mezzanine within to the double height space at grade while consolidating the load of the front half of the building above. The structural expressionism is softened with an integrated timber balustrade and fluted paneling, clay plaster finishes, dress curtains, and soft furnishings. The floors and skirtings of fixed joinery are clad in brick congruent to the building’s facade.

We created vitrines from rhombic volumes clad in porcelain and glass to display and elevate the curated merchandise of the concept store and surrounded them with curved banquettes, sofas, and soft stools that promote lingering. The space, like the contents of the vitrines, lies at the crossroads of art and commerce. Equal parts gallery, lounge, coffee shop, retail concept, and living room, the space beckons to the street and is as welcoming as it is inscrutable. It is our hope that passers-by will feel compelled to come inside to further discern what, exactly, it is, and then feel free to get comfortable and stay a while.


Buckle Street Studios London by Grzywinski+Pons. Photograph by Nicholas Worley.

In the apartments in the crown, all the allure and utility of the luminous glazed cladding confers advantages to the interiors. The low iron glass and specular reflective sidewalls of the blocks amplify the warmth and brightness of the space. We balanced their glossy cartesian rigor with prodigious billowing curtains, clay plaster walls, and cross-sawn timber floors. Ultrasuede upholstery and lush bedding further insure the rooms are as comfortable as they are iconic.

Lower in the building, these organic materials have their texture and depth amplified by the directional pooled light from windows we positioned to maximize views and mitigate overlook. We also designed the furniture to implicitly organize small spaces into areas for disparate activities. We took some inspiration from the cabins of boats where quality and comfort transcend compact proportions.

By linking sumptuous custom sofas to beds and designing compact tiered tables, shallow linear shelves, and hanging timber trays, the imperative to efficiently facilitate functionality yielded a comprehensive aesthetic that manages to feel luxurious. The palette: blush tinted clay, sage, timber, jute, creamy stone, and velvety neutrals, further contribute to the plush serenity of the studios.

For us, as architects, and our client, this project also furthers the equally urban and personal interrogation between public and private, residents and visitors. This blend is the very stuff of so many of the most successful and vital communities in London. An enigmatic yet alluring public space anchoring co-working spaces and aparthotel rooms create an inclusive and inviting context from which the community and visitors can interact with and inspire one another.

More information

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Architects
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Grzywinski+Pons. Lead architects.- Matthew Grzywinski, Amador Pons.
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Collaborators
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Structural Engineers.- Manhire Associates.
MEP Consultant.- Applied Energy.
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Client
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Locke group.
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General Contractor
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Bennett.
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Area
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3,530 m².
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Dates
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2022.
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Location
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Buckle Street, Aldgate East, London, UK.
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Manufacturers
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Laufen, Artek, CEDIT, Catalano, FLOS, Hakwood, Luceplan, Mutina.
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Photography
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Grzywinski+Pons Ltd is a New York City-based practice led by principals Matthew Grzywinski and Amador Pons. Our practice is committed to designing excellence predicated on quality, beauty, innovation and a rigorous approach to detail.

Matthew Grzywinski studied at Brown University and the Rhode Island School of Design, earning degrees in Architecture and Industrial Design. As a solo practitioner, he designed and administrated the construction of commercial and retail commissions as well as a host of built residential projects in New York City and beyond before co-founding his practice with Amador Pons in 2003. He has been a speaker, critic and contributor to architectural and urban developmental think tanks, summits and charettes in New York, London, Los Angeles, Paris, Barcelona, Madrid, Tokyo, Toronto, Basel, Munich and Milan.

Amador Pons earned his Architecture degree at Syracuse University. After several years of managing the construction of multiple renovations and new ground-up construction buildings in and around New York City in addition to co-producing Earthquake! (Springer Wien Press 2001) with Lebbeus Woods, Pons joined Matthew Grzywinski to establish their practice in 2003.
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Published on: August 22, 2022
Cite: "An elegant tower, an urban lantern. Buckle Street Studios London by Grzywinski+Pons" METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/elegant-tower-urban-lantern-buckle-street-studios-london-grzywinskipons> ISSN 1139-6415
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