Barn Conversions

Undertaking a barn conversion or significant restoration can be a daunting task. Some barns are more readily converted into homes or other modern uses than others. Traditional barns in Devon usually follow type-patterns and are often characterised by an uncluttered exterior with blank walls with few openings, forming a shell around a single space.

Successful convertion of a barn or farm building that does not have many openings within its walls will often be dependent upon its location, quality and importance, as bringing in light and dividing up the space will usually be necessary.

Conservation officers from the planning department may play an important role, as well as the suitability of the proposed new use, when compared to the Local Plan. Often a considered argument is required to set out the principles to convert or restore before detailed plans are prepared. Barns and farm buildings are often converted into new homes, wedding venues, conference centres, start-up business units, holiday lets and offices. Whatever the proposed use, the original building should still be legible after conversion, and this can be a persuasive argument if a modern, contemporary solution is desired, as the new is clearly defined from the old.

Careful attention to original features and traditional construction methods can help secure consent to convert. Sensitive use of traditional local materials and crafts such as stone, cob, rammed earth, green oak, lime mortar and lime render, slates and thatch help tie the building to its history and add to its appeal. These techniques can be applied both in a traditional style and in a modern interpretation.

Traditional techniques and local materials are sustainable and eco-friendly and are less harmful to original fragile walls and roofs. Old stone and cob walls need to be allowed to ‘breathe’ to ensure that they can dry out naturally which is contrary to many new building products and often need expert advice.

Working with an old building can have unique challenges, ranging from bats to subsidence and collapse, but is rewarded with a characterful and beautiful end result that can breathe new life into a underused building. Conversion and restoration can range from minor works and repairs of leaks and rot through to rather more grand designs incorporating modern lifestyles.

Some related projects can be found in the conservation section.

 

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Seabrook Orchards Granted Consent!

Seabrook Orchards achieved a unanimous planning approval at a packed Exeter City Council’s Civic Centre on Tuesday Evening. Grainge Architects are extremely proud to have provided architectural & urban design input into this key project.

The scheme is for a new housing area with a strong community focus, on land off Topsham Road, Exeter. It forms part of the wider Newcourt Urban extension, as proposed in the City Council’s adopted Newcourt masterplan. The development includes 700 new homes, a primary school, community hall, doctors surgery, primary healthcare facilities, cafe, creche, local store (as part of a local centre, Seabrook Square), two care homes, plus new sports pitches & pavilions, play areas, multi-use games area (MUGA), community allotments and orchards, informal open spaces and nature conservation areas.

The vision for Seabrook Orchards was to create a sustainable new living environment, an inclusive community with new homes accessible to everyone, a place where people will want to live, where they feel comfortable and safe, with ready access to essential facilities including education, healthcare, a local store, open space, landscape and amenity areas. It will deliver a wide range and choice of high quality, sustainable housing, including a range of affordable housing.

The proposed architecture of Seabrook builds on local vernacular with strong references to the unique characteristics of both Exeter & Topsham. The Town Square benefits from the award wining principles employed at Poundbury in Dorchester, successfully implemented local schemes such as Wyvern barracks and the principles set out in the exeter city residential guideline.

Below are the approved master plan for the 51 hectare site including Town Square, Topsham Road frontage &  typical highly sustainable housing.

Seabrook Orchards project page

 

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2012, New year resolutions, time for a office refurbishment?

Even in times of hardship some companies are growing and some are merging or downsizing. Moving offices or premises can be a lengthly and expensive process and can be quite disruptive to work flow. Maintaining an existing address through times of recession or slow growth can give confidence in your brand. Perhaps 2012 is the year to renovate and design a new office fit-out?

A well designed and refurbished office will not only impress visitors, but could help improve the business through staff productivity and enjoyment. Working in an environment that is well lit, well ventilated with comfy and ergonomic surroundings is such a vital part of getting the most out of a workforce.

Some common generic office problems include, unwelcoming entrances, too hot, too cold, too noisy, too stuffy, too cluttered, too distracting, not enough welfare facilities or daily inconveniences such as parking or finding a private changing space or somewhere to store your lunch. Getting an independent expert, such as an interior designer or architects to help re-lay out an existing office or design a new one can be of significant benefit.

Office fit out Architects are trained and have experience in how people behave in spaces, and how buildings are used. Simple aims such as line of sight of reception upon entry, knowing where to find the toilets without having to ask, an appearance of an organised workforce without clutter or mess, and comfortable conditions are all too often missed in office buildings that have been poorly altered over the years. A wholistic new approach can dramatically change the first impression for customers and enjoyment of being at work.

Our own office building is simple in layout and very cost-effective. It is a pleasant place to be and work, the office space is tall, naturally ventilated, well lit, adequately spaced with plenty of hidden storage, quiet, with long-distance views and good facilities, we also have the added bonus of a balcony, but that is the perk of designing your own building!

Some aspects of good office design we enjoy are an open plan office where we can really interact and work as a team, with a dedicated print room and library, a nice conference room, a smaller soundproofed meeting room, a kitchen hidden from view, toilets and shower, covered bike hoops by the door and easy public car parking. Incorporating some fundamental building physics into the design keeps the office as green and sustainable as possible. Large south facing windows and doors flood in natural light, with blinds for the low winter morning sun and an overhanging roof to shade from the hot summer rays. The electric (daylight colour temperature) lighting is controlled in banks, so we can switch off rows depending on how bright the day is outside. Opening up the windows and roof mounted windcatchers (link) brings in fresh cross ventilation and the windcatchers can be left open securely overnight in the summer to purge the day’s air. Our heating is individually controlled for each desk and runs off simple oversize pipes under the desks. Each workstation has plenty of power and data connections underneath to keep technology looking neat.

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Darts Farm open new natural bird watching hide with help from green roof architects

Grainge Architects have helped Dart’s Farm Ltd build a new bird hide and educational area on site, outside of Topsham. Most green roof architects and designers tend to include green roofs on buildings to improve an outlook. Here the green roof was included to benefit the wildlife, and to help disguise the building from view, rather than drawing attention to it.

Following on from the original design of Darts Farm shopping village, Grainge Architects have worked on several smaller projects and extensions as the retail development has grown, including the Cotswold outdoor / RSPB building. Darts Farm ltd are keen to improve on their facilities and the new hide will help them do this. Adjacent to the wetland floodplain of the river Clyst is the new hide and teaching area next to the established fishing ponds. The design had to be able to accommodate medium-sized groups of schoolchildren and groups of bird watchers.

 The timber-built design is intended to mellow into the landscape over time and includes wires for climbing plants and a green roof, planted with sedum plants. Grainge Architects ran an internal mini design-competition within the practice, where everybody worked alone to come up with ideas for it’s concept and design over a time period. The Dart brothers then reviewed and picked their favourite elements of each, culminating in the final hybrid design. The view from the hide overlooks the Clyst floodplain, looking back to Topsham and the new cycle bridge. Grainge Architects were also instrumental in the bridge’s inception, working with Darts Farm and the Bridge Inn. This established the essential layout and design concept, avoiding traffic lights and paving the way for the now constructed bridge.

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The Queen opens Grainge Architect’s latest school project

Grainge Architects have recently completed a new school on the Isles of Scilly. Grainge Architects worked with Kier Western contractors and a multi-disciplinary design team to design and build the single largest building in the Scilly’s history. The school encompasses a ‘through school’ approach, from reception age through to school leavers at age 16. This accommodates the disparate and varying population well and all the spaces have been designed carefully to be flexible. The budget has been pushed to get the most for the school and community, and the design includes for possible future works when monies allow. Careful consultation was undertaken with various regulatory bodies and agencies to ensure that the design meets the requirements of archaeology, sites of special scientific interest (SSSI), international breeding grounds for wildfowl and seabirds, and the Duchy of Cornwall as well as others. The Royal interest in the project has been exciting for Grainge Architects and it has influenced the design positively. Prince Charles’s architectural advisor and team have commented on the design as it has progressed and have helped shape the final result. The school has been one of the more significant jobs in the practice over the last year and it was the icing on the cake when we were told that the Queen would be formally opening it.

James and Tony, two of the directors were part of the receiving line along with the school governors, council and contractor. Tony explained the main ideas of the design to Her Royal Highness and she was given a brief tour before unveiling the ceremonial stone.

Project page

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Dry house – 10 years on…..

Re-visiting an old completed building.

Grainge architects have always maintained strong relationships with their clients and often these relationships are long lasting. As architects it is always great to be able to re-visit your designs as they age, and working in the wide range of sectors that Grainge do, often allows this to happen. Most of the staff visit the local commercial projects such as Darts farm or Tiverton pannier market regularly, but private houses, health or educational buildings are often harder to get the ‘full tour’ as time passes.

Grainge architects have been back to the X-centre on Exeter’s quay recently to help provide the Guinness trust and the building users with some architectural photographs of the building in its current use, with the building users. The building is used for many purposes including conference facilities, a recording studio, media suite and social and healthcare development programmes. Grainge originally designed the building using the footprint of the former drying house that burned down and it formed part of the rejuvenation of the quay and leatside with the Foyer project. The building forms part of the character of the quay, but most people don’t realise how good it looks from the inside too!

Grainge architects took new photographs of the building in use, over several different days and various activities. It was an interesting insight to the building’s idiosyncrasies and character 10 years since completion. Below are some of the images that were taken.

link to x-centre project page

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College café is students cup of tea….

The recently finished Exeter College café has been a complete success for Grainge Architects as well as for the students, staff and visitors that now use this facility.

The “CCI” Building – Exeter College’s highly successful Centre for Creative Industries (visual arts, media and performing arts) suffered from a lack of general social gathering facilities and refreshments that help to create leisurely interaction, which is an important element in the creative process.

 

Initial studies were carried out into the feasibility of amending the existing internal space to accommodate this, but as all rooms and spaces were fully and valuably used, so this was not possible.

Meanwhile, the existing external space formed between the CCI building and the Victoria Yard Studios building was badly defined, it lead no-where and was lacking in focus or purpose.

These two factors together lead to the proposal to provide a new café building within this area. The design concept is almost ‘anti-building’ in that the principal built space – the café itself – is part of the free-flowing internal / external space, separated by minimally-framed glazed walls with canopies rising to approximately 11/2 storeys in height.

We will keep this blog updated with our future projects, but please feel free to comment or contact us if there is anything you wish to discuss.

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Ilfracombe Church Refurbishment – Building for the future

Ilfracombe’s Church of Our Lady Star of the Sea, has undergone a dramatic refurbishment programme, to provide a more attractive, welcoming and multi-purpose building for the 21st century.

Started October 2010, the 4 month building work had to be phased allowing the church to open over Christmas for worship and consists of new floor slab with under floor heating, the existing floor was broken up and removed, and the foundations laid for the new under-floor heating. Powered by new boilers, it will now be possible to heat specific zones of the church only, so saving energy and money. Insulation has also been installed between the existing rafters over the main roof.

A new sound system and state of the art lighting has been installed, along with new storage cabinets, and a Farrow & Ball colour consultant advised on the decoration through out. The original pews have been kept, but there are new chairs that are light and easily stacked for storage and transfer.

This development of the church building itself has provided an improved worship centre, with better sound, seating and heating, and overall facilities. The transformation is stunning, but the beautiful key features of the original church are still retained.

We will keep this blog updated with our future projects, but please feel free to comment or contact us if there is anything you wish to discuss.

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Performance Arts Centre

So far its been an interesting and varied year at Grainge Architects and we thought you may like to know about one of our recently completed projects that we are particularly proud of…….

“Vision: Tremough – Creating a world class campus

In order to accommodate the merger of Dartington College of Arts and University College Falmouth, the Tremough Development Vehicle seeks to build a new world class facility for the performing arts on land at the Tremough Campus, Penryn, Cornwall. The building will become a new contemporary centre for distinctive practice-led learning methods and will provide bespoke facilities for musician, theatre, dancers and choreographers. The building should respond to the landscape and orientation to create an environmentally responsible building allowing a coherent yet extendable composition within the context of the developing Masterplan”

Grainge Architects received the design in 2008 and teamed up with Leadbitter Construction to provide technical design in collaboration with Airey & Coles (structure), Hoare Lea (building services) & Rathbone Partnership (landscape).

The new £19M Performance Centre was carefully designed to provide state-of-the-art facilities for Music, Dance and Theatre students.

Grainge worked with Leadbitter Construction in developing various construction techniques in response to a tight programme ensuring all aesthetic requirements were met. The building consists primarily of a loadbearing concrete and steel frame with non-structural infill panels and external cladding with differing finishes of slate, render, timber, curtain walling and brick. Also variety of internal finishes to meet robustness, acoustic and fire requirements.

The challenge of providing acoustically sound internal and external walls was resolved through combined use of masonry and drywall construction methods developed in consultation with acoustic specialists and specialist subcontractors.

The challenge to provide an ‘open’ building, whilst maintaining security and emergency fire escape where required, were resolved through development with the client, building control and specialist subcontractors.

The building is designed to accommodate and maximize the natural sloping nature of the site. This posed various challenges with regard to providing level access for Disability Discrimination Act (DDA). Through development with a specialist DDA consultant throughout the design development process, potential problems were focused upon and ironed-out through careful detailing and through development of an access management scheme developed in liaison with the client.

The building is designed as a series of linked clusters located in the landscape and comprises of three main floors. Circulation spaces run below glass shards that bring light into the deep plan below and allow natural ventilation. The volumes of the building help to create an environment for informal interchange and with a gross floor area of 4161sqm it can be used by around 530 students and staff.

The large double height dance and theatre studios, with variable raked seating options and fully sprung Harlequin floors, are situated on the lower ground floor. Smaller single story theatre studios are situated off a mezzanine gallery partially cut into the hillside.

The double height music studios are situated on the upper ground floor at entrance level. The third dance studio and office area are situated in a separate block at ground floor level, and connected to the main building on the lower levels via one of the ‘shards’.

The main entrance is at upper ground floor level where an informal landscaped courtyard provides views across the landscape. The flat roof above the main theatre studio incorporates a green roof area planted as a wild flower meadow habitat.

The building takes sustainability seriously and contains a number of features designed to increase its energy efficiency such as maximizing natural daylight and ventilation, using locally sourced materials, a ‘Green’ roof with carefully selected wild flower seeding, providing surface water drainage attenuation, solar shading to minimize solar gain and a building form that works closely with existing site topography to minimize ground engineering works. All of which has achieved a BREEAM ‘excellent’ rating.

The surrounding landscape incorporates a water-retention pond linked to the storm water drainage from the building designed to slow the flow of water from building to water-course, making use of the steeply sloping site. Rathbone Partnership were employed to create a variety of planting to enhance habitat around the building and pond area to maximize species for BREEAM.

Project page on main website

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Exciting times for the Holsworthy Agri-Business Centre

These are exciting times for the Holsworthy agri-business project and for Grainge Architects as we have just been chosen to provide the detailed planning application for the proposed livestock market relocation to Agri-Business Park and livestock market redevelopment, which represents a major step towards achieving delivery of this £6million project.

The current livestock market does not provide for the modern requirements of the agri-business sector and it is constrained by a number of factors including: location, topography, highways access and environmental impact issues.

It is envisaged that following the relocation of the market the current site will provide an opportunity to provide residential/mixed use development contributing towards the growth and prosperity of the market town.

We will keep this you updated with the progress of this project, but please feel free to comment or contact us if there is anything you wish to discuss.

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