CLAD people
Helen Taylor

Senior Associate, Woods Bagot


Project The Londoner
When the scaffolding comes down on Edwardian Hotels' £300m (US$387m, €348m), Woods Bagot-designed Londoner hotel, an artwork façade will be revealed.

The boutique hotel and cinema complex will cover 32,000sq m (345,000sq ft) in central London, span 15 storeys and have a six-storey, 30m (98ft)-deep basement.

But Helen Taylor, project lead at architects Woods Bagot, told CLAD that it was creating its faience design – using glazed terracotta as a decorative skin – that proved to be a unique and interesting challenge.

"Planning requirements meant that The Londoner must incorporate some public art into the development – and the concept for the façade was that it would be the artwork," she said."Woods Bagot worked with a locally based painter and sculptor to realise the idea of lining the exterior window reveals, tower and upper setbacks with alternating patterns of three-dimensional glazed faience tiles."

"The mass of the building is angled down at the south and rises to the north, which is pronounced by a tower wrapped in a faceted, ultramarine blue faience soffit. This unique façade will display 30 different mosaic patterns comprised of 15,000 terracotta tiles designed in collaboration with artist Ian Monroe.

"To precisely fit each handmade tile together, the design team utilized advanced BIM technology, giving the finished design a contemporary feel to a traditional material widely used in the city."

The biggest and most publicised challenge – as a solution to the height restrictions of the local area – has been the construction of the basement.

"The internal makeup is supported by six, 55-ton (50-tonne) steel trusses installed to transfer the weight of the above-ground structure over the area of the basement. It also provides the space for a 16m (52ft) by 6.5m (21ft) underground ballroom, as well as the cinema and an atrium without any columns."

The complex will house a variety of restaurants and bars, including a contemporary Japanese lounge bar with a rooftop terrace and fire pit.

There will also be a spa, swimming pool, gym, hair and nail salon and a barbershop.

The Londoner is scheduled to open in June 2020.

The 350-room hotel will be complemented by two underground cinemas, restaurants, bars, wellness spaces and an event space
According to Woods Bagot, 'This 15-storey project will sensitively integrate itself into the historic south west corner of Leicester Square'
Each tile took up to six weeks to make, from the initial pour through to the final firing
 


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18 Apr 2024 Leisure Management: daily news and jobs
 
 
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SELECTED ISSUE
CLADmag
2019 issue 4

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Leisure Management - Helen Taylor

CLAD people

Helen Taylor


Senior Associate, Woods Bagot

Helen Taylor Senior associate, Woods Bagot
The 350-room hotel will be complemented by two underground cinemas, restaurants, bars, wellness spaces and an event space
According to Woods Bagot, 'This 15-storey project will sensitively integrate itself into the historic south west corner of Leicester Square'
Each tile took up to six weeks to make, from the initial pour through to the final firing

Project The Londoner
When the scaffolding comes down on Edwardian Hotels' £300m (US$387m, €348m), Woods Bagot-designed Londoner hotel, an artwork façade will be revealed.

The boutique hotel and cinema complex will cover 32,000sq m (345,000sq ft) in central London, span 15 storeys and have a six-storey, 30m (98ft)-deep basement.

But Helen Taylor, project lead at architects Woods Bagot, told CLAD that it was creating its faience design – using glazed terracotta as a decorative skin – that proved to be a unique and interesting challenge.

"Planning requirements meant that The Londoner must incorporate some public art into the development – and the concept for the façade was that it would be the artwork," she said."Woods Bagot worked with a locally based painter and sculptor to realise the idea of lining the exterior window reveals, tower and upper setbacks with alternating patterns of three-dimensional glazed faience tiles."

"The mass of the building is angled down at the south and rises to the north, which is pronounced by a tower wrapped in a faceted, ultramarine blue faience soffit. This unique façade will display 30 different mosaic patterns comprised of 15,000 terracotta tiles designed in collaboration with artist Ian Monroe.

"To precisely fit each handmade tile together, the design team utilized advanced BIM technology, giving the finished design a contemporary feel to a traditional material widely used in the city."

The biggest and most publicised challenge – as a solution to the height restrictions of the local area – has been the construction of the basement.

"The internal makeup is supported by six, 55-ton (50-tonne) steel trusses installed to transfer the weight of the above-ground structure over the area of the basement. It also provides the space for a 16m (52ft) by 6.5m (21ft) underground ballroom, as well as the cinema and an atrium without any columns."

The complex will house a variety of restaurants and bars, including a contemporary Japanese lounge bar with a rooftop terrace and fire pit.

There will also be a spa, swimming pool, gym, hair and nail salon and a barbershop.

The Londoner is scheduled to open in June 2020.


Originally published in CLADmag 2019 issue 4

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