Homeless housing is "a Band-Aid" for UK shortages says Peter Barber

Architects should use their influence to help bring an end to London's homelessness crisis, said housing specialist Peter Barber in an exclusive interview with Dezeen, but admits his projects are "just scratching the surface" of the problem.

Barber has designed numerous homeless housing projects in London including Mount Pleasant and Spring Gardens schemes. However, he is aware that these projects are only a small part of what needs to be done to solve London's homelessness crisis.

"The hostel projects are really rewarding and they feel like big achievements, although it's a bit of a Band-Aid," he told Dezeen.

"I'm quite pleased with the designs, but the danger is thinking 'oh that's nice, aren't we good?' when it's just scratching the surface," he added.

Everyone responsible "for sorting the situation out"

His own practice, the eponymous Peter Barber Architects, has developed a reputation for building sturdy, beautiful social housing as well as homeless hostels. The studio's McGrath Road project in London recently won the RIBA Neave Brown Award for Housing.

Barber estimates he has designed buildings with 250 rough sleeper bed spaces in London during his career of 40-plus years.

The Greater London Authority's best estimate is that more than 11,000 people slept rough in the city between April 2020 and April 2021, with outreach workers spotting 7,531 people bedding down outside for the first time during that period.

Barber also designed Mount Pleasant homeless housing in London

Barber believes that everyone bears "responsibility for sorting the situation out", but that architects have "direct access" to make an impact on helping to solve homelessness in London.

"I think it's important not just to see ourselves as architects," said Barber. "We are also citizens. And those two things go together."

"So I feel like anybody feels, I suppose, as they step over somebody [sleeping rough] as they come out of the tube," he continued. "I feel a great sense of guilt about that."

Decline of social housing

Barber began studying to become an architect in the late 1970s when "things were actually a lot better" for housing in the UK, he said.

Since then, the housing market has been marked by a steep decline in the proportion of people living in social housing, principally as a result of Margaret Thatcher's Right to Buy policy, which allows council tenants to purchase their home at a large discount.

Housing experts have linked an undersupply of social housing to the steady rise in homelessness witnessed since 2010.

"All those people who enjoyed the benefits of living in social housing don't have that anymore," reflected Barber. "It's quite dispiriting that on our watch, we've seen things become so problematic.

Peter Barber (top image) is the architect behind the award-winning McGrath Road housing (above)

He wants to see the Right to Buy scrapped and for the government to launch a "new public housing programme" focused on rejuvenating deprived urban areas where homes sit empty as well as new supply.

In addition, he would like an enhanced role for housing co-operatives working on small, local projects.

"One is full of admiration for the postwar generation building vast 150,000 times a year in the social sector," he continued. "But maybe if we do have a new programme, it could kind of bubble up from beneath with money from above."

"Always challenge a brief"

Barber began his career as a practising architect under the guidance of the late architect Richard Rogers, before moving on to work for architecture studio Jestico + Whiles where he gained a "great deal of experience in housing in London".

Those experiences, he said "taught me to always challenge a brief and really try to look beyond the constraints as they're presented, and to add your own ingredients, not just to take things at face value".

His first solo project was a house in Saudi Arabia, which led him to be commissioned for Donnybrook Quarter, a housing scheme Barber describes as the studio's breakthrough.

He founded Peter Barber Architects in London in 1989. The studio has operated from a homely office in an old Victorian printworks since 2002.

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A glimpse of its extensive portfolio can be seen by looking through the office windows, behind which the walls are covered with architectural models and photos of almshouses, terraced housing and flats.

Today, the majority of his studio's housing projects are characterised by the transformation of tricky or neglected sites, the incorporation of public spaces and a mix of home types to meet different needs.

"I don't think affordable housing needs to be any different from any other housing," he explained.

"The thing that I think is important is the shared space of the street," he continued. "Very often people like a bit of outside space, very often people like their own front door on the street and not sharing the front door with 100 other flats."

"The other thing to be said is that there is no one size fits all."

Interest in timber construction

His studio's projects are also known for their monolithic forms crafted from brick and concrete, which Barber said are intended to offer a sense of permanence, challenging contemporary housing developments in the UK that he describes as "half-hearted" and "framey".

"This is the idea of a building being really solid and permanent, that's one of the features," he said.

However, Barber anticipates these trademark material choices could soon change in light of the climate crisis.

"I'm not happy that we're building in brick and concrete," he explained, pointing to their carbon footprints.

He added that he is "very interested in timber construction", but using wood-based products is becoming increasingly inaccessible.

The studio recently created a terrace of social housing in south London

Regulations restricting the use of combustible materials introduced by the government and London mayor Sadiq Khan in the wake of the Grenfell Tower fire make it difficult for architects to specify timber.

"[Using timber is] becoming very difficult with the new mayoral directive against timber construction," Barber said. "Properly detailed timber buildings are fine, it's nonsense."

His words echo those of Andrew Waugh, who referred to these policies as "a car crash", as they are preventing the move to low-carbon building methods.

Housing is "such a fascinating thing"

One thing Barber is certain will not change is the size of his studio. Since its founding, he has deliberately kept the team small. In fact, with between eight to 10 people, meetings there have previously been likened to "a dinner party", he said.

His decision to limit the size of the studio rejects the trend for creating giant architectural firms of the 21st century, and according to Barber, is an effort to uphold the standards of the studio.

"One of my objectives apart from trying to make some good architecture and make some money has been to keep the practice really small," he explained.

"I've worked from practices that have grown and their architecture got worse, and it's got less fun. And I wanted to avoid that, really," he said. "That happens every time."

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Sifting through photos of the studio's latest projects scattered over the meeting table, Barber added that he is confident his penchant for housing will also remain unchanged.

"Somebody did say to me once about 15 years ago, 'don't you think you should diversify?', and I'm thinking well, I just love it, I'm so happy doing it," he recalled.

"[Housing is] such a fascinating thing and sometimes the most everyday and ordinary things are the most interesting."

The photography is byMorley von Sternberg.

The post Homeless housing is "a Band-Aid" for UK shortages says Peter Barber appeared first on Dezeen.

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Homeless housing is "a Band-Aid" for UK shortages says Peter Barber

Architects should use their influence to help bring an end to London's homelessness crisis, Peter Barber said in an exclusive interview with Dezeen, while admitting some of his own work is merely "a bit of a Band-Aid".

Dezeen

Peter Barber Architects revamps and densifies London social housing estate

Peter Barber Architects has rejuvenated the post-war Kiln Place social housing estate in London and created 15 new homes.

Working with the London Borough of Camden, Peter Barber Architects aimed to update the whole estate and increase its density without demolishing any of the existing homes.

Peter Barber Architects updated the Kilm Place housing estate

"Fundamentally, focused interventions can avoid demolition of existing homes, whilst still making wholescale improvements to local areas and adding significant new density," said Peter Barber Architects associate director Alice Brownfield.

"Environmentally, socially and economically we cannot continue to demolish homes unnecessarily and instead need to focus on densifying our existing neighbourhoods, improving existing buildings and protecting social infrastructure and diverse communities," she told Dezeen.

A terrace of houses was created at one of the entrances to the estate

A terrace of brick homes was built at one of the entrances to the estate, while further low-rise homes were built at the corners of existing blocks and on underused bits of ground between existing buildings and in place of disused plant rooms.

Another new home, which was partially slotted into old oil tank rooms, pops out of the older building to provide roof terraces for flats above.

In total 15 homes were added to the site. Seven of these were created for social rent, the most affordable tenure of housing in the UK, with the rest for market sale.

Other homes were added on small plots on the estate

The additional homes form part of the wider series of improvements to the estate, which included refurbishing many of the existing flats.

"We saw the location and design of the new homes as integral to achieving wider estate improvements so these were doing a lot of the hard work," said Brownfield.

"We then tried to find simple solutions that would have a big impact, for example, the removal of timber louvres along the ground floor elevation of two blocks, giving existing residents front gardens onto a new street instead of a corridor."

Another home was squeezed between two existing blocks

As part of a rethink of the Gospel Oak site, the studio made improvements to the estate's layout so that people would be encouraged to walk through it.

This included the creation of a new street with front gardens for existing flats that were previously only accessible via communal corridors.

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Peter Barber Architects adds terraced houses to estate in south London

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"We wanted to extend the street pattern of the adjacent Oak Village so that public spaces felt better overlooked and people might start to walk through the estate as a natural route across the neighbourhood," Brownfield explained.

"We did this by inserting carefully designed new homes and making small but impactful improvements to existing buildings – creating new streets through the estate that are well overlooked, provide the opportunity for social action and make wider estate improvements.

Additional walkways were created to improve access across the site

Brownfield hopes that Kiln Place can serve as an example of how existing housing estates can be improved and made denser without resorting to wholesale demolition.

"Hopefully Kiln Place stands as a small but very practical example of how we can densify our cities without demolition and displacement of public housing estates," she said.

"London and the UK are not alone in considering how to densify our cities and resolve some of the urban challenges of post-war estates. Look as far as Tokyo even and the same conversations are happening."

In total 15 new homes were created

Peter Barber Architects has delivered a series of social housing schemes for London boroughs, including a terrace of homes for older people on a site in Greenwich which the studio said had previously been considered "undevelopable".

Its McGrath Road scheme in Newham recently won the Neave Brown Award for Housing 2021, given to the best new affordable housing project in the UK.

The photography is byMorley Von Sternberg.

The post Peter Barber Architects revamps and densifies London social housing estate appeared first on Dezeen.

#residential #all #architecture #london #uk #peterbarberarchitects #socialhousing

Peter Barber Architects revamps and densifies London social housing estate

Peter Barber Architects has rejuvenated the post-war Kiln Place social housing estate in London and created 15 new homes.

Dezeen

Peter Barber Architects' "intelligent, dynamic and original" McGrath Road named UK's best affordable housing scheme

The McGrath Road housing project by Peter Barber Architects in east London has won this year's RIBA Neave Brown Award for Housing 2021.

The brick scheme was given the award, which is presented to the best new affordable housing scheme in the UK by the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA), at a ceremony last week.

McGrath Road has won this year's Neave Brown Award for Housing

"Intelligent, dynamic and original – this unique configuration of housing has the McGrath Road community at its heart," said Simon Allford, president of RIBA.

"It's an exemplar of high-quality social housing within one of London's most densely populated boroughs and demonstrates what can – and must – be achieved across the country."

The housing has distinctive recessed arches

The social housing estate, built for the London Borough of Newham, is made up of 26 townhouses fronted with distinctive recessed arches and arranged around a central courtyard.

Every home is three or four storeys tall and has a balcony, a private terrace and a living room on the top floor with views across London, while all are for social rent, affordable rent or shared ownership.

It is Peter Barber Architects latest London housing scheme

Peter Barber Architects has built up a reputation for high-quality, unusual social housing projects across London, with its founder Peter Barber awarded an OBE in the 2021 Queen's Birthday Honours.

The practice previously told Dezeen that the McGrath Road estate is a reinterpretation of Victorian back-to-back housing.

The block contains social rent, affordable rent or shared ownership flats

The award is named after the late Neave Brown, an architect known for pioneering modernist social housing estates such as Alexandra Road in Camden, north London.

Brown famously rejected the trend for high-rise residential buildings in the 1960s and '70s in favour of street-based estates with an emphasis on community spaces.

Allford said McGrath Road would have been "championed by the late, great Neave Brown".

[

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Peter Barber Architects creates terraced tenement block in Peckham

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David Mikhail, chair of the Neave Brown Award for Housing jury, said the McGrath Road scheme "demonstrates how imaginative street-based architecture can be socially progressive and architecturally engaging – a combination that endears Peter Barber Architects' work to so many people".

Mikhail is the co-founder of London-based architectural studio Mikhail Riches won the first Neave Brown Award for Housing in 2019 for its highly-decorated Goldsmith Street in Norwich, which also took that year's RIBA Stirling Prize.

Pooja Agrawal, co-founder and CEO of social enterprise Public Practice, and Neave Brown family representative Mark Swenarton joined Mikhail on the award jury.

The housing is arranged around a central courtyard

To be considered for the Neave Brown Award for Housing projects must be made up of 10 or more homes and have been completed must have won a RIBA Regional Award. At least one third of the housing must be at affordable tenures.

Peter Barber Architects' McGrath Road was joined on this year's Neave Brown Award for Housing shortlist by the studio's 95 Peckham Road project, Stanton Williams' Key Workers housing in Cambridge and Blackfriars Circus by Maccreanor Lavington.

Photography is byMorley Von Sternberg.

The post Peter Barber Architects' "intelligent, dynamic and original" McGrath Road named UK's best affordable housing scheme appeared first on Dezeen.

#all #architecture #news #uk #riba #housing #peterbarberarchitects #socialhousing #neavebrown

Peter Barber Architects' "dynamic" McGrath Road named UK's best affordable housing scheme

The McGrath Road housing project by Peter Barber Architects in east London has won this year's RIBA Neave Brown Award for Housing 2021.

Peter Barber Architects' "intelligent, dynamic and original" McGrath Road named UK's best affordable housing scheme

The McGrath Road housing project by Peter Barber Architects in east London has won this year's RIBA Neave Brown Award for Housing 2021.

The brick scheme was given the award, which is presented to the best new affordable housing scheme in the UK by the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA), at a ceremony last week.

McGrath Road has won this year's Neave Brown Award for Housing

"Intelligent, dynamic and original – this unique configuration of housing has the McGrath Road community at its heart," said Simon Allford, president of RIBA.

"It's an exemplar of high-quality social housing within one of London's most densely populated boroughs and demonstrates what can – and must – be achieved across the country."

The housing has distinctive recessed arches

The social housing estate, built for the London Borough of Newham, is made up of 26 townhouses fronted with distinctive recessed arches and arranged around a central courtyard.

Every home is three or four storeys tall and has a balcony, a private terrace and a living room on the top floor with views across London, while all are for social rent, affordable rent or shared ownership.

It is Peter Barber Architects latest London housing scheme

Peter Barber Architects has built up a reputation for high-quality, unusual social housing projects across London, with its founder Peter Barber awarded an OBE in the 2021 Queen's Birthday Honours.

The practice previously told Dezeen that the McGrath Road estate is a reinterpretation of Victorian back-to-back housing.

The block contains social rent, affordable rent or shared ownership flats

The award is named after the late Neave Brown, an architect known for pioneering modernist social housing estates such as Alexandra Road in Camden, north London.

Brown famously rejected the trend for high-rise residential buildings in the 1960s and '70s in favour of street-based estates with an emphasis on community spaces.

Allford said McGrath Road would have been "championed by the late, great Neave Brown".

[

Read:

Peter Barber Architects creates terraced tenement block in Peckham

](https://www.dezeen.com/2020/04/15/peter-barber-architects-95-peckham-road-housing/)

David Mikhail, chair of the Neave Brown Award for Housing jury, said the McGrath Road scheme "demonstrates how imaginative street-based architecture can be socially progressive and architecturally engaging – a combination that endears Peter Barber Architects' work to so many people".

Mikhail is the co-founder of London-based architectural studio Mikhail Riches won the first Neave Brown Award for Housing in 2019 for its highly-decorated Goldsmith Street in Norwich, which also took that year's RIBA Stirling Prize.

Pooja Agrawal, co-founder and CEO of social enterprise Public Practice, and Neave Brown family representative Mark Swenarton joined Mikhail on the award jury.

The housing is arranged around a central courtyard

To be considered for the Neave Brown Award for Housing projects must be made up of 10 or more homes and have been completed must have won a RIBA Regional Award. At least one third of the housing must be at affordable tenures.

Peter Barber Architects' McGrath Road was joined on this year's Neave Brown Award for Housing shortlist by the studio's 95 Peckham Road project, Stanton Williams' Key Workers housing in Cambridge and Blackfriars Circus by Maccreanor Lavington.

Photography is byMorley Von Sternberg.

The post Peter Barber Architects' "intelligent, dynamic and original" McGrath Road named UK's best affordable housing scheme appeared first on Dezeen.

#all #architecture #news #uk #riba #housing #peterbarberarchitects #socialhousing #neavebrown

Peter Barber Architects' "dynamic" McGrath Road named UK's best affordable housing scheme

The McGrath Road housing project by Peter Barber Architects in east London has won this year's RIBA Neave Brown Award for Housing 2021.