10 Hanover Street | Squire & Partners

London / United Kingdom / 2013

16
16 Love 4,960 Visits Published
Squire and Partners has completed a slender apartment building on London’s Hanover Street, featuring full height bespoke perforated shutters. The building forms part of a mixed-use development which also provides a new office building and the Hus Gallery of contemporary art. From 1800 to 1930 Hanover Street was the home of military tailoring, which influenced the design and craft in the detail of the building. A chevron motif used to perforate the facade is abstracted from military insignia, and combined with traditional military colours. The shutters are a contemporary reference to traditional timber shutters used in Mayfair residences to provide privacy and light modulation. Spanning the width of the building, the shutters can be fully opened and closed forming a dynamic frontage to the street and assisting with environmental control. When closed the bronze shutters allow light to permeate through displaying the chevron pattern, and when open reveal flashes of red lining and gold trim. Each typical floor contains a single apartment with a duplex apartment on the upper floors. Large open plan kitchen/living rooms to the front offer views towards Regent Street and Hanover Square. Details of Shutters/Façade The tall narrow façade is broken horizontally by a series of dolomite white pre-cast concrete balconies lipped with anodised aluminium edge trims (Regency Gold). The balconies were fabricated in Belgium by Lloveld. To maintain their slender appearance the balconies were profiled to integrate tracks for the folding sliding shutters, a channel for the glass balustrade, stone floor finish and drainage. The dolomite white face of the balconies breaks the façade into a series of planes, framing the shutters between by form and colour. The contrasting expression of the slabs also emphasised the double height screens to the penthouse. Between the precast balconies folding sliding shutters provide screening and environmental control to the apartments. The shutters are a bespoke fabricated component built by Astec Projects. They are manually operated rather than motorised to reduce weight and remove additional components to maintain the slender appearance of the balconies. The screens have two different forms of construction, one for the typical floors and one for the double height shutters. The typical floor shutters are fundamentally the frames and mechanisms of a Schuco ASS 70 FD aluminium bi-folding door system wrapped in a perforated skin. The Schuco system was stripped of all accessory components (glazing, weather proofing etc) back to the profiles. The leaves where then wrapped externally, with a dark bronze perforated anodised aluminium panel, internally, with a matching perforated crimson red PPC aluminium panel and edge trimmed with punctured Regency Gold anodised aluminium strips. The double height shutters are finished as the typical floors but have an additional structural component - to offset the inherent racking issues of the 6m tall leaves, the profiles were milled and a secondary steel sub-frame was introduced for rigidity and balance. The finishes and colours of the shutters make reference to the historic occupation of the site. Dark bronze refers to the traditional material of Mayfair shop fronts, and is perforated in a chevron pattern as a beloved military insignia. The crimson red makes reference to colours used in decorative military uniform – seen only from oblique views along Hanover Street, it acts like the flash of colour behind a military lapel, while the Regency Gold trims reference the colour and finish of metallic buttons and studs. The language of the Hanover Street facade is continuous along the east flank wall seen from Regent Street. Bands of dolomite white pre-cast concrete (fabricated by Lloveld) extend from the balconies along the facade. Between the bands are bespoke cassette panels of double skin aluminium rainscreen cladding (fabricated by Astec Projects). The cladding retains the relationship of colours and pattern from the shutters, with an external face of chevron perforated dark bronze and inner face of crimson red PPC aluminium. The cladding is punctuated by crimson glass panels that appear to slide out from behind the dark bronze face, and Regency Gold fins that replicate the edge trims to the shutters.
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    Squire and Partners has completed a slender apartment building on London’s Hanover Street, featuring full height bespoke perforated shutters. The building forms part of a mixed-use development which also provides a new office building and the Hus Gallery of contemporary art. From 1800 to 1930 Hanover Street was the home of military tailoring, which influenced the design and craft in the detail of the building. A chevron motif used to perforate the facade is abstracted from military insignia,...

    Project details
    • Year 2013
    • Work finished in 2013
    • Client Morgan Capital Partnership
    • Contractor MACE
    • Cost £13 million
    • Status Completed works
    • Type Apartments / Multi-family residence / Tower blocks/Skyscrapers
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