Sidell Gibson Architects

Sidell Gibson has been highly commended for its refurbishment of 1 Bartholomew Lane in the City Heritage Award 2011, sponsored by The City Heritage Society and The Worshipful Company of Painter-Stainers.

Prominently located opposite the Bank of England in the heart of the City of London, this complex £32.5m refurbishment project provides 7,381 sq m of high-specification, open and flexible, contemporary, Grade A office space across 12 storeys, three of which have terraces.  The building was refurbished to high energy-efficiency standards and achieved a BREEAM rating of Very Good.

The project was particularly commended for the sensitive retention of the six-storey façade of the 1930s bank building and the successful reworking of the building’s upper levels.  Desmond Fitzpatrick, Chairman of the Panel of Assessors of the City Heritage Award 2011 said, “It is a matter for great satisfaction that this building continues to make an important contribution to the heart of the City, particularly to the setting of the Bank of England.”

The City Heritage Award is presented each year for what is considered to be the best refurbishment project in the City of London.   The City Heritage Society was founded in 1973 to help preserve buildings in the City which, because of their architectural merit or historic interest, demand to be retained for future generations.  The Society also ensures that new buildings are of high quality and harmonise with their neighbours and generally encourages high standards of quality in the built environment.

Partner in Charge, Richard Morton, said, “We are delighted to receive this recognition from the City of London for our work on this fine building by Mewes and Davis, designers of the Ritz.  After a great team effort our client now has a building which will perform effectively for many years to come.”

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Sidell Gibson’s work has been recognised with two awards at the Association of Interior Specialists Contractors Awards 2011.

The practice’s recently completed £67m project at One Snow Hill in Birmingham received a Gold Award for the partitioning work undertaken by Moda Interiors.  One Snow Hill is the first of two fast track office buildings to be completed in central Birmingham’s prestigious Snow Hill development for Barclays.  The partitioning work included a glass screen installation which was technically very complex with curved glass screens, curve glass doors and door frames.  Peter Balch, Managing Director at Moda Interiors, said, “We are delighted to be recognised as a leading contractor in our industry.  This award demonstrates the quality of work we produce and the benefits of working in partnership to fulfil the ultimate end user’s client requirements.”

London’s multi award-winning mixed-use development, One New Change, was awarded the Gold Judges’ Award for the internal cladding design and the finishes to the retail arcade ceiling, undertaken by Clark & Fenn Skanska Ltd.  Piotr Pawlowski, Contracts Manager, said, “We are delighted that our work at One New Change has won the Gold Judges’s Award.  This project was particularly complex, incorporating bespoke logistics and innovative technology such as facetted stainless steel ceiling panels with concealed fixings and polished plaster to the large ceiling planes, which consisted of different angles, sloping edges and differing levelling points.  A supporting grid frame  was constructed for strength and stability for the polished plaster application and to maintain isolated panel movement.  Each ceiling facet of polished plaster panels was  also finished with multiple colours to correspond to the external cladding facade.”

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Ron Sidell will be speaking at the NLA’s conference ‘London’s Workplaces:  Remaining competitive in a changing world’, on the subject of office design and management.

With a back-catalogue containing some of the most inspiring Central London offices built in the last 20 years, Ron has plenty of reference material!  More recently, the masterplanning of the Paddington Central project, the Snow Hill redevelopment in Birmingham and finally One New Change, one of the most historically strategic and comprehensive redevelopments completed in the City of London.

London is consistently ranked as one of the leading cities to locate, invest and do business.  It is the engine room for the UK economy and a key driver of innovation and growth.  London’s workplaces must adapt and develop to remain competitive by developing a more sustainable approach to energy use, accommodating advanced technologies and creating improved working environments which allow business to attract and retain the best talent.  The conference will be looking at the challenges ahead and the ways in which the sector is responding.

Further information at www.newlondonarchitecture.org

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London’s One New Change building has won the Building Excellence Award of the London District Surveyors Association.  The development was awarded the Best Commercial Project in the City of London at last night’s awards ceremony.

Designed by Sidell Gibson Architects in collaboration with Ateliers Jean Nouvel, the £300 million building opened in October 2010 and represents one of the largest consolidated retail spaces across central London.  The mixed-use development, adjacent to St Paul’s Cathedral, is one of the most historically strategic and comprehensive redevelopments in the City of London.

One of three projects nominated  for these awards, it was considered One New Change provides a prime example of how it is possible to honour the City of London’s past whilst also forging its future.

Speaking on behalf of Sidell Gibson, Sanya Tomic, Partner responsible for One New Change, said, “We are very pleased that One New Change was nominated by the City of London District Surveyor’s Office and are delighted to be the winner in the Best Commercial Project category.  We will continue to build on our excellent working relationship and partnering approach with the City of London District Surveyors Office to deliver challenging and innovative projects such as One New Change.”

Sanya Tomic, partner at Sidell Gibson Architects and Matt Perry from Land Securities, collection the RIBA Award for One New Change

Sanya Tomic, partner at Sidell Gibson Architects and Matt Perry from Land Securities, collection the RIBA Award for One New Change. (photo by Steve Speller)

London’s One New Change building, designed by Ateliers Jean Nouvel in association with Sidell Gibson Architects, has won a RIBA Award.

Opened in October 2010, the £300 million building, which represents one of the largest consolidated retail spaces across central London, has already won several prestigious awards.  The mixed-use development, adjacent to St Paul’s Cathedral, is one of the most historically strategic and comprehensive redevelopments in the City of London.

Speaking on behalf of Sidell Gibson, Sanya Tomic, Partner responsible for One New Change, said, “To win a RIBA Award is a remarkable achievement founded upon a collective effort; Jean Nouvel’s creativity consistently pushing the boundaries of the design, and our aspiration for quality, collaborative approach, lateral thinking and attention to detail at every level, delivering this innovative yet timeless design.”

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One New Change, in the heart of the City of London, has unveiled the first ever permanent public sculpture by one of Britain’s most celebrated, award-winning sculptors, Gavin Turk.

Turk was commissioned by developer, Land Securities, to create a striking new art installation which has been set into the pavement at the main entrance to the One New Change retail and office development which opened in October last year.

Resting at a slight 5° angle, the 12-metre high, cast bronze sculpture of a nail will sit dwarfed between the gleam of 21st century glass of One New Change and the historic, symbolic St Paul’s Cathedral.  ‘Nail’ represents Turk’s interpretation of the dialogue between these two monumental powerhouses with 300 years between them and the extraordinary changes wrought by human culture in the intervening centuries.

Turk’s focus on the transformative power of art and architecture echoes Pritzker Prize-winning architect Jean Nouvel’s vision for One New Change, delivered by Sidell Gibson Architects.

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Following the Open Call for Ideas on the future uses of architecture issued by the Royal Society of Arts and The Architecture Foundation earlier this year, Sidell Gibson Architects has been shortlisted as one of the seven ideas to be presented for interrogation and debate by an expert panel and before a public audience at The Resourceful Architect Day of Ideas on 18th May.

The practice’s idea, Mashup, was proposed by Richard Brearley and Uli Kraeling and explores an electronic microsite connecting social and personal needs with derelict pockets of land and buildings in London.

The six other shortlisted ideas, chosen from 56 international entries, include The Redundant Architect Recreation Association (RARA) by East London Design Bureau; 72-hour Urban Action by Alison Killing, Killing Architects, Amsterdam; Space for Exchange: A Sustainable Return to Srebrenica by Vernes Causevic, London Metropolitan University; School of Architecture for All (SCHARCHA), led by Maria Theodoru, Athens; Pavement for Las Lomas by Bara Safarova, London Metropolitan University; The Architects Adhocracy by Mobile Studio and Yesomi Umolu, London.

The public Day of Ideas will take place on 18th May in the RSA’s historic Great Room auditorium, 8 John Adam Street, London WC2.  The expert panel will include property developer David Partridge, Brazilian architect Fernando de Mello Franco, design and environment consultant Peter Bishop and educational entrepreneur Sophie Haworth and will be chaired by architecture professor and participatory planning pioneer Nabeel Hamdi.

Tickets to attend are free, but must be reserved in advance via the RSA website – www.thersa.org/projects/design/theresourcefularchitect

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Partner at Sidell Gibson Architects, Sanya Tomic, was invited to give a presentation on award-winning building One New Change at the Spring Members’ Meeting of The Centre for Window and Cladding Technology in Central London.

The one-day event was titled “Trends in Building envelopes”.  Building envelopes are fundamental to buildings in terms of appearance, performance and sustainability.  The event discussed likely trends in building envelopes as these drivers of envelope design change.  The other speakers from Theis & Khan, BRE, Allies & Morrison, CWCT, Sir Robert McAlpine & King Shaw spoke about buildings of different types, new materials and the challenges ahead.

Sanya described in detail the façade treatment of One New Change where different coloured matt and smooth surfaces echo the surrounding stone and brick buildings and highlighted the complex glazing treatment which changes from opaque to transparent using a coloured frit pattern with a white etch frit pattern printed on exterior panes of glass. She also explained their very close collaboration with Jean Nouvel and the expertise, experience, and attention to detail that Sidell Gibson’s team brought to the projects to deliver this exceptional building.

For Sanya’s full presentation, please click here

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Sidell Gibson Architects are undertaking a major conversion and extension of the vacant 3 storey Grade II Listed Victorian Board School Building in Kentish Town, London. This dynamic project aims to serve the needs of the French speaking community by imaginative and sensitive reuse, together with essential development of the existing buildings, to create a New French School serving 700 pupils ranging in age from 5 to 15 years old.

The design, as far as possible, makes use of the existing spaces and is organised within the grain of the original layout, but with significant qualitative improvement throughout. The essential elements of adaptation relate to meeting modern legislation for schools, including disabled access, means of escape requirements and improving environmental standards and sustainability to attain a BREEAM rating of Very Good.

Having now achieved Listed Building Consent and Full Planning Permission, construction work has started on site with completion programmed in July 2011.

Phase 2 of the project involves a new 3 storey teaching block and a single storey Infants school integrated into an existing single storey Listed outbuilding.

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We are delighted to learn recently that 7-10 Old Bailey has won one of the International Architecture Awards for the Best New Global Design 2010 given by the Chicago Athenaeum. There were only 95 awards worldwide and only three for UK schemes.