Housing Design Awards: Quality good, quantity bad
The stand-out entries in this year鈥檚 Housing Design Awards were often developed by councils taking control of their own housing in the face of huge demand by becoming developers. However, back in 2008, softening prices meant that nobody seemed very interested in residential.
鈥淚t seems that splendid new housing is rather thin on the ground this year. Come to think of it, so is any kind of housing,鈥 黑洞社区 wrote. Landscaping also took a hit, often being 鈥渢reated as if it were a contingency fund for the building鈥. The winning schemes were those that paid plenty of attention to public realm.
The overall winner was Urban Splash, which rebuilt 16 Edwardian terraces of two-up, two-downs behind their original red-brick facades at Chimney Pot Park, Salford, in a 鈥渟trikingly original and compact hybrid of conservation and new build鈥. Architect Shed KM replaced chimneys with triangular rooflights to let daylight in.
Other winners included Adelaide Wharf, north London, built to good quality at a lower than usual cost, and Rostron Brow, Stockport, which had the challenge of converting a tobacco warehouse alongside a new-build while creating medieval character.
To read the full article from 4 July 2008, click here
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