Productivity is the generator of a new urban environment. Through ecologies created by innovative relationships a city can begin to reassess its potential for growth. An area can become formal or informal, generated as a result of existing variables within a community. Production comes as a result of encounters.
1 ABSTRACT
Productivity is the generator of a new urban environment. Through ecologies created by innovative relationships a city can begin to reassess its potential for growth. An area can become formal or informal, generated as a result of existing variables within a community. Production comes as a result of encounters.
2ABSTRACT
ROYAL DOCKS
3
4
5
Introduction.... 01. The Potentials of a Productive Ecology in the Royal Docklands
History
Site conditions
Potential
02. Tools, Themes, and Methodologies of Investigation
Tools
Themes
Methodologies
ROYAL DOCKSIndex
INDEX
6
03. Two Sectors: Food and Film
04. The Projects
Industry, Institution, Infra-structure.
The Film Studio/The Edu-cation Center.
Synergies between Food and Film.
Sky Chef and a School for Hotel Management and Hospitality Training.
Introducing new Institu-tions and new Sectors to the Site.
Expanding the Institution and Completing the Infra-structural Loop.
Intro of Food and Film
Food
Film
Execution
Scale
New Productive Ecology
05. Towards a Productive Ecology
Appendix
Images
Articles
Bibliography/Notes
ii
INDEX
7 INTRODUCTION
8
INTRODUCTION
INTRODUCTION
The goal of the project is to reinterpret the Royal Docklands through tools, themes, and methodologies that can be used to create a new productive environment. By reclaiming introverted industrial land and introducing new industrial sectors, on varying scales, we will develop an idea that will respond to existing conditions as well as create new potentials of productivity. We have chosen to respond to three areas of activity: industry, infrastructure, and institutions. These three tools will help to drive our argument further as we learn about their existing influence, as well as experiment with the potential for their evolution. Urban themes based around production, consumption, and education will progress the existing tools of our investigation into a reinterpretation of a productive environment in the Royal Docklands.
9 CHAPTER 01
10
The Potentials of a Productive Ecology in the Royal Docklands.
CHAPTER 01
CHAPTER 01
THE ROYAL DOCKLANDS - DEINDUSTRIALIZED LAND
CHAPTER 0111
Docklands circa 1965
Docklands circa 2005
CHAPTER 01 12
History of the Docklands
From the largest industrial shipping port in all of England to an area that contains one of the largest exhibition centres in London, the Royal Docklands has been used over time by a multitude of industries and institutions at varying scales. The Docklands was a destination for the storage and processing of good coming to and from England. Its proximity to local waterways that ran through the country made it an advantageous location. However, due to an increase in containerization, the Docklands could no longer support the size of ships and cargo. As a result the area began to decline slowly, and activity in the once busy dock became nearly non-existent. Over time large corporations and business moved in to take advantage of large tracts of land and left over industrial sheds so close to central London. One of the largest industrial food manufactures, Tate and Lyle, has been a significant presence in the Docklands for over 200 years, and has continued to grow at a national and international scale. Connection to the rest of the city was only by road, any residential communities that developed were taken by individuals and families that could afford the commute. The Docklands finally embraced another means of accessibility in 1987 by building the London City Airport. The Docklands Light Rail (DLR) way opened to speed travel to and from Central London a few years later. Since the increase in new infrastructure, the Docklands has developed new industries and institutions that take advantage of the unique characteristics so close to Central London. Today the Royal Docklands is a short distance to the vibrant heart of London and the business distract of Canary Wharf. It sits just south of the Olympic site and at the start of the Thames Gateway Development scheme. Major venues have situated themselves along the former docklands and are trying to revitalize some areas through exhibition-based activities. Residential communities have developed in response to the DLR, and a university has located itself along the north-western corner of the site. Various urban tools of industry, institution, and infrastructure are ensuring a positive growth in the area. However, the Docklands becomes notable when it is possible to think about the amount of potential that lies in its unique characterizes and existing conditions. The next step is to recognize these aspects and how their potential can be executed to generate a productive environment.
13 CHAPTER 01
14
Site Conditions
Stretching over 650 hectares the Docklands is an enormous site with a unique landscape that is not seen anywhere this close the Central London. It provides one of the largest stretches of land, in one borough, that fronts the Thames River. The site also has an expansive stretch of interior waterscape from its shipping port days. Most of the land is relatively flat and from the top of any tall building it is possible to get a view of the London skyline. The Docklands is well connected by the DLR, airport, and expansive road network. The major transportation services of the DLR and roads run along similar paths and cut north-to-south at key instances along the east-west dominated landscape. This transportation network helps to service exiting industries and institutions that exist on the site. The area also holds highly functioning examples of urban tools. The Excel Centre is one of London’s largest exhibition halls and it does its job of attracting visitors to the area from the regional and the world. The University of East London is able to enroll over 23,000 students. Additionally some of the largest food industries in the world located large processing and manufacturing plants in the heart of the Docklands southern industrial-belt. A myriad of activities are generating a productive level of business for the Docklands, but they do not take full-advantage of all the area has to offer.
CHAPTER 01
CHAPTER 0115
Existing Conditions
CHAPTER 01 16
Existing infrastructural network and limited waterfront access
CHAPTER 0117
Existing Conditions
CHAPTER 01 18
Urban grain
Urban character
Tube lines (DLR)
Roads
Water connections
CHAPTER 0119
Siemens
Cable Car
CHAPTER 01 20
PotentialSiemens
ExCeL
University East London
Cable Car
Thames Gateway River Crossing
The landscape of the Docklands creates an attractive site for further investigation into creating a new productive urban centre. The amount of land available, ease of connections – locally, nationally, internationally, surrounding landscapes of the waters edge, as well as a variety of industries and institutions in close vicinity are key characteristics of the landscape. To create this new productive environment our project has taken into account the main attributes of the Docklands as well as urban themes that can be used to guide our thinking. This project will experiment with ways to create potential from existing urban conditions by reassessing them with new methodologies.
CHAPTER 0121
PotentialExisting Industries, Institutions, and Infrastructure
CHAPTER 01 22
museum
CHAPTER 0223
CHAPTER 02 24
Tools, Themes, and Methodologies of Investigation
CHAPTER 02
25 CHAPTER 02
Tate and Lyle
26
Tools. Industry
CHAPTER 02
The tools for our investigations are primary elements in the urban environment, industry, institutions, and infrastructure (3 i’s). Each of these tools functions dependent on the others, creating an urban system of reliant services and activities. These tools allow us to develop an understanding of the existing site conditions as well as create a point of reference to further develop ways to create production-generating interventions. When we started the investigation of the “3 i’s” it was noted that particular companies of each dominated their sector. While the Docklands hold numerous instances of industries and institutions, and provides more than one mode of infrastructure, only a few are seen as exemplars to help us investigate the potentials of a new productive environment. Established industries on the site are operating at large scales. Tate and Lyle is one of the largest food manufacturers in England. It utilizes a few of the industrial sheds that were left over from the shipping industry in a campus that centres around a large processing plant. Currently Tate and Lyle engage the rest of the Docklands by providing jobs in its processing plant. Another prominent industrial site is Loon Fung, a Chinese food importer with an attached grocery store. It operates next to, but does not interact with the Tate and Lyle campus. Other industrial sites are given over to logistical services, creating large tracts of land that are used infrequently. Most of the industries on the site operate autonomously of one another, as their functions do not depend on the other. Yet all of the industries rely on the infrastructural system to ensure their products are distributed. Using industries as tools of investigation gives our projects an understanding of the function and utilize the land, as well as how one tool (industry) can create a dependent relationship with another (infrastructure).
27
Industry
CHAPTER 02
Manufacturing/ Storage
Open/ Closed edges
Industrial pattern
Description of Industries
28
industrial cluster residential clusterinfrastructure infrastructure
infrastructure
infrastructure
industrial open space
industrial cluster residential cluster
industrial cluster industrial open space
Industry
CHAPTER 02
29
Industry
CHAPTER 02
World scale
Metropolitan scale
Local scale
Existing condition
30
Industry+Institutions
CHAPTER 02
Possible ways to achieve the permeability of the industrial belt
Characteristics of the industrial belt
31 CHAPTER 02
UEL
Britannia Community Centre
Excel Centre
Siemens Centre
32
Tools. Institutions
CHAPTER 02
Institutions in the Royal Docklands range in size, from small community centers operating with public funds, to large commercial exhibition halls that attract international business. The institutions play a strong role in developing the current character of the Docklands. They bring in most of the outside traffic into the site, primarily the Excel Center, the University of East London (UEL), and the soon-to-be Siemens center. These three organizations each represent different elements of institutions – commercial, educational, and technological. The Excel Center attracts visitors from London, England, and the world by hosting a variety of events and conferences. Excel is one of the main businesses that are associated with the Docklands, making it a significant presence and representative. The UEL draws more than 23,000 students to the area, making it one of the largest higher education institutes in East London. The university is a key figure in the Docklands, because it provides a variety of educational resources for the surrounding community, creating a valuable resource. The Siemens center will be a new research center that will promote sustainable choices and products. This technology-based institution will be the first of its kind in the Docklands, allowing us to use this as a catalyst to generate new technology based projects. These instances of institutions provide good tools into the investigation of a productive urban centre. Each functions as different elements and provides us with opportunities in which we can extend their influence into the rest of the site and our new projects.
Institutions
33 CHAPTER 02
The footprint and interconnection of existing and upcoming Institutions
UEL
The Royal Business ParkExCeL
Siemens
Institutions
34CHAPTER 02
The footprint of existing Institutions
UEL
ExCeL
LARGE SCALEExcel
LARGE SCALEUEL
35 CHAPTER 02
SMALL SCALEBritannia Village. Community Centre
LARGE SCALESiemens
36CHAPTER 02
37 CHAPTER 02
38
Tools. Infrastructure
CHAPTER 02
The existing infrastructure acts as a generator to the industries and institutions. The DLR provides immediate services with the rest of London with 11 stations scattered across the Docklands. The DLR forks in the north-west portion of the site and splits running along the northern and southern part of the Docklands. The DLR services all major institutions and industries, but does not create an enclosed transportation loop. The track provides linkage to and within the site, but also creates physical barriers, which are somewhat alleviated by viaducts and pedestrian overpasses. This generates land underneath and on either side that is unused. London City Airport provides international connections to the rest Europe and the world, bringing in almost 9,000 people per day. The airport supports other related industries, such as catering, cargo shipping, and logistics storage. It is an important link for the rest of the Docklands because of its convenient location for travel to and from London and England. These tools of infrastructure will prove to be advantageous in the future projects because they will provide ample opportunities for experimentation.
39
Infrastructure
CHAPTER 02
DLR line
Pedestrian routes
Roads
Water path
40
Infrastructure+Industry
CHAPTER 02
International scale
Metropolitan scale
Local scale
Existing condition
41 CHAPTER 02
InfrastructureSections
42CHAPTER 02
InfrastructureSections
43 CHAPTER 02CHAPTER 02
44CHAPTER 02CHAPTER 02CHAPTER 02
Proposed Cross Rail station
Excel centre
45 CHAPTER 02
Themes Production, Consumption, Education
The “3 i’s” are parts of cities, and in our investigation we will use them as tools. To develop and understand these tools on our site, we have taken into consideration themes of production, consumption, and education. Each of these themes operates in the “3 i’s”, but helps to clarify them as productive generators. We utilize these themes in our project by assessing their viability to operate on different scales and with the existing conditions throughout the site. The theme of production can be used to understand the development of business incubators. New business becomes a generator of production because it brings in people and capital. To create an environment on our site that will benefit new businesses we need to understand where potentials of production lie. Production may be generated through the DLR network that services existing institutions and industries, or by reclaiming the industrial sheds; perhaps it becomes a tool in which one rethinks the lack of cross-over between the industries and institutions. Consumption and education will act as supporters to the theme of production. Consumption will become a way to measure positive growth. The giving and taking of goods and services will be the quantities measured in consumption, the by-product of a productive environment. An educational theme will work with existing institutions, such as the UEL, but also become a way to explore the potentials of new ways to exchange information. Education is exchange of ideas, something that will be essential to our new productive environment. Production, consumption, and education all work together and support one another. These themes will become points of interaction through a series of composite strategies. They are ways to reestablish the tools of our initial investigation. Production, consumption, and education must work on a variety of scales because of the size of the Docklands, but because they will help us to understand the variations of the “3 i’s” in our projects.
Methodologies
The tools are ways to understand the site conditions and the themes are ways to readdress the tools in the unique environment of the Docklands. In our investigation of our site with these tools and themes, and our experimentation of a new productive urban ecology we have become interested in the potentials of the existing site conditions, particularly how the “3 i’s” can re-relate to one another. Tate and Lyle is the biggest industry on our site, not only in land mass but also as an economic generator. We have chosen to take this industry, food, as a catalyst for our project. However, in order to fully express the potentials of productivity that are inherent in the food industry we have thought it best to use another seemingly unrelated industry to further develop the potentials of food. The film industry has a presence within close proximity to the Docklands; an active studio is accessible via the DLR and takes under 10 minutes from most stations. There may already seem to be a superficial relationship between food and film, as both operate within the themes of production and consumption. However, it is about readdressing these industries with an understanding of how their relationship can be interpreted on the site with our tools and themes.
46CHAPTER 02
Themes Production, Consumption, Education
The “3 i’s” are parts of cities, and in our investigation we will use them as tools. To develop and understand these tools on our site, we have taken into consideration themes of production, consumption, and education. Each of these themes operates in the “3 i’s”, but helps to clarify them as productive generators. We utilize these themes in our project by assessing their viability to operate on different scales and with the existing conditions throughout the site. The theme of production can be used to understand the development of business incubators. New business becomes a generator of production because it brings in people and capital. To create an environment on our site that will benefit new businesses we need to understand where potentials of production lie. Production may be generated through the DLR network that services existing institutions and industries, or by reclaiming the industrial sheds; perhaps it becomes a tool in which one rethinks the lack of cross-over between the industries and institutions. Consumption and education will act as supporters to the theme of production. Consumption will become a way to measure positive growth. The giving and taking of goods and services will be the quantities measured in consumption, the by-product of a productive environment. An educational theme will work with existing institutions, such as the UEL, but also become a way to explore the potentials of new ways to exchange information. Education is exchange of ideas, something that will be essential to our new productive environment. Production, consumption, and education all work together and support one another. These themes will become points of interaction through a series of composite strategies. They are ways to reestablish the tools of our initial investigation. Production, consumption, and education must work on a variety of scales because of the size of the Docklands, but because they will help us to understand the variations of the “3 i’s” in our projects.
Methodologies
The tools are ways to understand the site conditions and the themes are ways to readdress the tools in the unique environment of the Docklands. In our investigation of our site with these tools and themes, and our experimentation of a new productive urban ecology we have become interested in the potentials of the existing site conditions, particularly how the “3 i’s” can re-relate to one another. Tate and Lyle is the biggest industry on our site, not only in land mass but also as an economic generator. We have chosen to take this industry, food, as a catalyst for our project. However, in order to fully express the potentials of productivity that are inherent in the food industry we have thought it best to use another seemingly unrelated industry to further develop the potentials of food. The film industry has a presence within close proximity to the Docklands; an active studio is accessible via the DLR and takes under 10 minutes from most stations. There may already seem to be a superficial relationship between food and film, as both operate within the themes of production and consumption. However, it is about readdressing these industries with an understanding of how their relationship can be interpreted on the site with our tools and themes.
International scale
Metropolitan scale
Local scale
By re-qualifying industry, institutions, infrastructure, and introducing two new sectors, food and film, we will generate an urban ecology that will create a new productive environment.
47 CHAPTER 02
By re-qualifying industry, institutions, infrastructure, and introducing two new sectors, food and film, we will generate an urban ecology that will create a new productive environment.
48CHAPTER 02
49 CHAPTER 03
50
Two Sectors: Food and Film
CHAPTER 03
CHAPTER 03
51 CHAPTER 03
52
Food, Film
We have chosen food and film as the drivers of our productive ecology because of the possibilities each of these industries has in developing beyond their typical models. Food and film are established industries that could function independently of each other. In London they both operate and distinguish neighborhoods with their unique roles. Our new productive urban environment is about creating an ecology that can happen between the existing and new; not limiting a reassessment of our tools and themes by introducing an economically proven industry. By choosing food and film as our industries we question how to push their individual functions further by developing a new relationship between them. The strength of each industry relies in its ability to produce something to be consumed. Their inter-relationship would alter this function to produce more and at a larger variety of scales and services. Aspects of the food industry can be used in the creative industry of film. The functions of film will be serviced by the food industry. By rethinking food and film through a reassessment of our themes, tailoring them to respond to the tools of investigation on our site, and influencing one industry with the other we can generate a new urban ecology.
CHAPTER 03
53 CHAPTER 03
54
Food
Food occupies two of the largest industries in the Royal Docklands. Tate and Lyle is a significant presence in the Docklands. It rests on the shore and provides access to the Thames, however it is a closed campus and interaction only happens within, making it completely autonomous. The other prominent food industry on the site is Loon Fung, which has a campus set-up similar to Tate and Lyle and occupies a series of reused industrial sheds. When assessing the existing food industries on our site we see that they are mainly concerned with manufacturing and exporting. The relationship with the rest of the Docklands is extremely limited. Our proposals for the food industry would be to address all aspects of food production, consumption, and education through the tools of investigation. Food is an industry that is made up of various levels of services and activities. We have approached our understanding of the potentials of the food industry by the scale in which it operates, and the possibility for these multi-scalar activities to take advantage of the amount of infrequently used land in the Docklands. Farming represents the food industry at its fundamental base. An urban farm would be the start to create a closed-loop food system within the docklands and a generator for a myriad of other related activities. The food industry also require means of logistic, packaging and processing, inherent activities that will supplement fundamental and new interactions between food and film. Research facilities are also characteristics of the food industry that we will explore, and with the advent of the Siemens Centre another research-based venture has strong potential. By using the themes of production, consumption, and education we can start to reassess the ways food functions may start to service and rely on the film industry. New educational facilities, that partner with the existing institutions, may provide an opportunity to mix food and film in an environment that promotes learning and experimentation. Reassessing the production aspect of the food industry and how it provides services to communities will also be fundamental. New methods of production may come out of the shared education facilities, creative partnership between elements of food and film will be stimulated in these types of environments. Consumption of goods, services, and knowledge will be the factors that will make food and film a viable crossover.
CHAPTER 03
CHAPTER 0355
Aerial view of Tate&Lyle.
Section
The case of Tate&Lyle - London - UK
CHAPTER 03 56
Aerial view of Loong Fung.
Section
The case of Loong Fung - London - UK
CHAPTER 0357
CHAPTER 03 58
We have used a case-study to understand the possibilities of the food industry to create an urban centre. Greater Grimsby is a city in the United Kingdom that has become the largest fish-producing town in the nation. It has engaged the rest of the town and has embedded itself as the largest economy in Greater Grimsby. Fish manufacturing and its supported industries are separated across the town, resulting in a connection that passes through the town core. This creates a zone of dense productivity in the centre of the city. As a result of the mix of services directly related to the fishing industry other services have popped up to cater to the needs of workers, shipping, and manufacturing. We use Greater Grimsby as a model to understand the potentials generated when an industry engages with its surrounding community, in this instance in a physical and economic way.
59 CHAPTER 03
60
Film
We have chosen to utilize the creativity of the film industry to drive a re-qualification of the food industry. 3-Mills Film Studio is located 3km north of the Docklands, and another abandoned studio is 2km to the north-east, both are easily accessible via the DLR. While the creative industry currently has little impact and presence in the Docklands, its proximity and characteristics hold high potential for a new urban ecology with the food sector. The film/creative industry will be viable in our site because of the multi-scalarity of its activities. Currently there do exist community and media performance centres that are used by local residents. These are small and act within a community radius. Yet, there presence is enough on which we can start to establish new creative industries that can act at a higher capacity. Some aspects of the creative industry are being supported by related activities in existing institutions. The Excel Centre holds a bi-annual film festival and UEL offers classes in the creative arts. There exists the possibility to create and recreate relationships with these institutions, the existing community centres, and new elements of the creative industry. These elements are only enhanced by the active infrastructure network that ensures the Docklands is connected to the vibrant creative communities in Central London and beyond. The film and creative industry create activities that have high potentials of production. New business incubators may facilitate the growth of a young creative class. This group of individuals may take advantage of educational facilities and centres that tailor to their profession, while creating new ways of expressing their learning via the food industry. There will be opportunities for creative studios to operate, possibly working for large food related businesses. Additionally new mixed residential services will be provided, mixing the young creative class of food and film. The potentials to this new urban ecology will not be made to function within the confines of the Docklands. The network of infrastructure will ensure people and services are utilized wherever there are connections. Re-engagement with the existing elements of the creative industry in institutions may help to act as catalyst to ensure integration into the existing neighborhoods.
CHAPTER 03
61 CHAPTER 03
62CHAPTER 03
Aerial view of Culver City.
Section
The case of Culver City - California - USA
63 CHAPTER 03
Aerial view of Ealing Studios.
Section 1 Section 2
The case of Ealing Studios - London - UK
64CHAPTER 03
Aerial view of SoHo.
Section
The case of SoHo - London - UK
65 CHAPTER 03
66CHAPTER 03
As with food we have used a variety of case-studies to understand how different scales of the creative industry can integrate themselves into a community and create productive economies. The neighborhood of Soho in Central London is an explosion of micro creative clusters that act in harmony with one another. Theatres rely on acting schools, and artists’ studios tailor to larger professional design studio. Soho becomes an example of creative sub-sectors crossing over one another to make a relationship of dependencies and interactions. Culver City is a film studio that functions as a completely introverted environment in the centre of a city. It is small in scale and support activities directly related to filming, however it must rely on services available outside its immediate vicinity as it cannot function solely on what is contained within the studio. Ealing Studio is located in a residential neighbor in North London, and while it is introverted like Culver City it can operate independently without reliance on outside services. These examples of active creative industries allow us to understand, in an urban setting, how a creative industry can relate to its surroundings. Through complete, partial, or no segregation, each creative industry gives us a variety of ways to deal with creative services. When we apply this to our projects we may use introverted activities in filming studios where security and control are essential, yet when we integrate film and food we need to know how relationship and dependencies are created and maintained.
We understand that each of these industries has strong potentials to functions effectively as individuals and the capacities they have for expansion onto the rest of the site. However, it is the unique characteristics of each that will respond to our site and make it a productive environment. The ability for each of them to hold their own individuality as a sector also presents a flexible platform in which they can combine and produce a new productive synergy.
67 CHAPTER 03
We understand that each of these industries has strong potentials to functions effectively as individuals and the capacities they have for expansion onto the rest of the site. However, it is the unique characteristics of each that will respond to our site and make it a productive environment. The ability for each of them to hold their own individuality as a sector also presents a flexible platform in which they can combine and produce a new productive synergy.
68CHAPTER 03
69
DLR
CHAPTER 04
70
CHAPTER 04
The Projects
WOOLWICH
tHe filM studio/tHe education centre
eXpandinG of institutions and
coMpletinG tHe infrastructural loop
introducinG tHe neW institutions and
neW sectors to tHe site
sYnerGies BetWeenfood and filM
sKY cHef and a scHool for Hotel ManaGeMent
and HospitalitY traininG
CHAPTER 04
71 CHAPTER 04
72
Industry, Institution, InfrastructureRethinking typologies
Our new urban ecology is formed from encounters of food and film as well as a retention of key aspects in their autonomous function. Through planned interventions we create formal and informal environments for the sectors to interact and create a new type of productive ecology. The functioning of food and film will change from their interactions. As a result, new ways to address their activities will emerge from our experimentation and understanding of the tools, themes, and methodologies. Typological reasoning is used to compliment the new activities that will be generated from the ecology of food and film. We have picked sites along the Royal Docklands that will take advantage of the existing site conditions as well as interact with local communities, institutions, and industries. The projects will be presented moving west to east as to show dependencies in their interaction and how new modes of infrastructure ensure their connectivity. While all projects will not happen in a sequential or simultaneous manner we present them in this way to show the intricacies of their encounters.
CHAPTER 04
73 CHAPTER 04
74
Bringing Film to the Royal Docklands
CHAPTER 04
The first site of our projects houses a large film studio. The scale of this plot, sandwiched between two functioning industrial sites, creates room for the large program associated with a film studio to establish. Space can be provided for filming sets, workshops, and offices. Unique programmatic needs of a film studio and the sites proximity to a residential neighborhood were addressed by sinking parts of the program, allowing accessibility onto the site by the creation of a public park.
The second site for a film related intervention stems off the initial film studio by providing educational facilities as well as live/work studio space. The site is situated in a prime location just south of a large residential neighborhood as well as a proposed food related intervention. This new area creates a productive environment by showcasing the possibilities of a synergy between food and film
75
Diagrams
Linking Britannia Village to the waterfront/Inserting the Workshops building as a sound buffer.
Inserting the program related to the Film Industry.
Thickening the ground covering parts of the program.
Porosity of the thickened ground level allowing different levels of interaction (public/services)and allowing transparency vis-a-vis the program.
Different layers of interaction with the site: public,amateur, professionals.
CHAPTER 04
76CHAPTER 04
The new park allows access via a 25m wide underpass, from the community of Britannia, linking to a new infrastructure along the waterfront of the Thames. A boat dock will be created to connect to the rest of London and other various landmarks along the water. The underpass will serve as a showcase for public art and enhanced by the introduction of greenery. The film activities being housed under the elevated park vary in size and thus the topographical landscape of the park transforms. Film professionals can access the film sets and other sunken areas from a road which runs lower, while the public can make their way across the park by a series of bridges above the service areas. This creates a unique experience for the user, as they will only be given a visual hint of the hive of activity beneath. The sunken program contains a theatre, a variety of movie sets, workshops, storage areas, and loading docks. However this complex arrangement of programs is porous, allowing the user to move freely around the different functions, not having to go to the surface to access other areas. Because of the proximity of the site to a residential neighbor precaution has been taken to buffer any noise that my come from the day or night. An office building has been designated towards the northern periphery of the site. It is raised above ground level, additionally creating a designated entry point for the park.
The Cinematographic Park
77 CHAPTER 04
Sections
Existing urban condition
Insertion of the program
78CHAPTER 04
79 CHAPTER 04
Section in process
Final section
Sections
80CHAPTER 04
81 CHAPTER 04
Diagrams
Bringing manufacturing/knowledge and residential on a common site.
Inserting the school (education layer) and live/work clusters (Productivity layer).Linking the central Mixed area of the overall project with the added diagonal.
Pushing the slabs, creating pockets.Planted terraces on the educational building.Superposed live/work spaces and planted roofs
Bringing the public inside the building from the ramp level.Raising the live/work spaces, generating more porosity and flexibility to the site.
Different layers of interaction with the site: amateur, professionals and visitors.
82
The Educational Centre
CHAPTER 04
The site reproduces the diagonal from the adjacent Thames Barrier Park. This landscape element splits site program, one side containing education the other production and consumption based enterprises. The educational facility functions around a giant staircase that allows the creative studios to climb up the building and interact with each other, providing the school community and visitors a unique perspective on their surroundings. On the other side, the create live/work spaces are designed to be light on the landscape. They are elevated off the ground and sometimes situated between trees, giving them a tree-house quality. This environment creates a unique environment for young creative talent to work. The diagonal cutting through the site acts as the main pedestrian thoroughfare, bringing people in as well as connecting with the quay site across the road by an underpass. People emerging from the underpass will discover a new type of environment by the complex layering of functions on the site. Public services are located on the ground floor, gardens suspended from the school and workshops, and professional work studios generate this creative-exchange based environment.
83 CHAPTER 04
Sections
Existing urban condition
Insertion of program
84CHAPTER 04
85 CHAPTER 04
Sections
Section in process
Final section
86CHAPTER 04
87 CHAPTER 04
88CHAPTER 04
Requalification of leftover spaces
89 CHAPTER 04
90CHAPTER 04
Synergies Between Food and Film
Traversing through the underpass the user is now immersed in the cross-over relationships of food and film. This site, located around the Silvertown Quay, is unique in its landscape and existing architecture. The three interventions take advantage of the location as well as carefully attune to the distinct qualities of food and film
1
2
3
4
91
farming
ROW
#4 pavillion +farming
ROW
seasonal apparatus
pivot door
0 6m
Existing structure:Research and developmentHousing______________RetailCommercial
fish tankseco walkfish nursery roof planting
#1 housing + research
#2 fish tank + farming
#3 film workshops
cycling pathwaterfront
/retail /walk
film workshops
public space
CHAPTER 04
92
farming
ROW
#4 pavillion +farming
ROW
seasonal apparatus
pivot door
0 6m
Existing structure:Research and developmentHousing______________RetailCommercial
fish tankseco walkfish nursery roof planting
#1 housing + research
#2 fish tank + farming
#3 film workshops
cycling pathwaterfront
/retail /walk
film workshops
public space
CHAPTER 04
Sections through various typological projects key sites of the Silvertown Quay
93 CHAPTER 04
94CHAPTER 04
Area calculations
95
FARMING CYCLE
Farm Harvesting ProcessingWashingPackingSorting...
Storage /24-48hTransportationDistribution to
retail
Water/Farming Cycle
CHAPTER 04
96CHAPTER 04
97 CHAPTER 04
98
Research and Education Clusters
Across the quay from the farm sits the abandoned Millennium Mills, a prime building to be reused as a basis for research and education related to aquaculture and floriculture. The building will incorporate a research centre with classrooms, lecture halls, computer and scientific laboratories, conference rooms, libraries, and residential quarters on the top floors for staff, researchers, students, and guests. The ground floor is divided from the research centre to accommodate commercial and retail activities that will open up to the waterfront and the neighboring community. The research building works on the land in front and adjacent to the Mills. Flower plantations are designed on mounds to create interesting patterns and distinct growing zones. They are sloped to create room underneath to house facilities for the adjacent fish-farm. Flowers were chosen for research as to not risk crossbred contamination with the vegetable farm a few hundred meters away. The flower plantation also provides a striking visual aesthetic. This clubbed with leisure and knowledge based activities on the site create a place for the new and existing community to interact and enjoy. To activate the waterfront, apart from the leisure and recreational activities, a fish-farm was designed, fortifying the objective to creative innovative uses of the new sectors to enhance productivity. The farm will produce consumable fish that will be sold to local restaurant and used in the cooking schools – places utilized by everyone. The program for the fish-farm is located in the calm waters of the quay. Workshops, nurseries, storage, and an information centre take advantage of the space created by the sloped flower plantations. A vehicular road, along the periphery, links all of these activities and services with the rest of the Docklands.
CHAPTER 04
Alternative 1a Alternative 2a
Alternative 1b Alternative 2b
Alternative 1c Alternative 2c
99 CHAPTER 04
100
1a /2a - Workshops, nurseries, information centre, storage rooms and multifunctional spaces arragend below the mounds.1b /2b - Topographical variation of the mounds1c /2c - Different variations of plantation layouts
Functional layers of a typical extensive green roof
CHAPTER 04
101
Slope angles study
Section BB - through the research plantation mounds
Section AA - through the research plantation moundsCHAPTER 04
102
Section through Millennium Mills
CHAPTER 04
103
Cluster section /Film workshops
CHAPTER 04
104
Creative Cluster
The combination of food and film creates an incredible range of activities and urban environments by mixing small/large scales, industries, and workshops. After analyzing the constraints and potentials of the site, this group started to test different design approaches and programs in order to achieve a creative urban environment. The land on the southern edge of the quay and the one first accessed by the sub-terrain underpass becomes the prime location for a synergy between food and film. Through the mixture of typological experiments, this project looks to enhance the “3 i’s” in a wider territory. The arrangement of buildings is organized in a permeable manner, enhancing the patterns of movement throughout the whole site. The program comprises of small-scale industrial workshops (creative clusters), film/food related workshops, agriculture, and a marketing and advertising school. These programs are designed through multiple articulations and address the livelihood of their encounters through multiple scales and hybrid typologies. The small scale workshops are arranged in different clusters. They create themed pockets which organize the workshops according to use, such as cenography, graphic design, sound editing, costume, lighting, and photography amongst others. The services provided in these workshops will be used by both food and film. It is essential to have a coherent spatial strategy to enhance the existing conditions of the city as well as create a more creative urban territory. The ability to synchronize different aspects of the territory is a substantial measure that is done in the design strategies.
CHAPTER 04
105
Cluster View**film workshops
Conceptual Diagrams /workshop clusters
CHAPTER 04
Cluster Viewfilm workshops
0.
13.19.
-0.30
-0.22
-0.15
-0.15
-0.15
0 11m
106
Film cluster arrangement
CHAPTER 04
107
Cluster section /Film workshops
CHAPTER 04
108CHAPTER 04
109 CHAPTER 04
Cluster section /Film workshops
110CHAPTER 04
111
Existing structure:Research and developmentHousing______________RetailCommercial
fish tankseco walk
film workshops
fish nursery roof planting
#1 #2
plant nursery roof planting
#3 #4
eco walkeco walk cycling path
waterfront /retail /walk
plant nursery roof planting
roof planting
#5*
#6*
plant nursery seatingfood school / institution eco walk
film workshopseco walk cycling path
waterfront /retail /walk
leisure
plant nursery fish tankseco walkfish nursery leisure Dock
existing structure - new housing plus retail + commercial
0 6m
0 6m
0 6m 0 6m
0 6m0 6m
film school
#**
cycling path
market DLRwaterfront /retail /walk
#**
cycling path
marketDLRinstallationwaterfront
/retail /walk
film workshops
public space retail
CHAPTER 04
Sections
112
Existing structure:Research and developmentHousing______________RetailCommercial
fish tankseco walk
film workshops
fish nursery roof planting
#1 #2
plant nursery roof planting
#3 #4
eco walkeco walk cycling path
waterfront /retail /walk
plant nursery roof planting
roof planting
#5*
#6*
plant nursery seatingfood school / institution eco walk
film workshopseco walk cycling path
waterfront /retail /walk
leisure
plant nursery fish tankseco walkfish nursery leisure Dock
existing structure - new housing plus retail + commercial
0 6m
0 6m
0 6m 0 6m
0 6m0 6m
film school
#**
cycling path
market DLRwaterfront /retail /walk
#**
cycling path
marketDLRinstallationwaterfront
/retail /walk
film workshops
public space retail
farming
ROW
#4 pavillion +farming
ROW
seasonal apparatus
pivot door
0 6m
Existing structure:Research and developmentHousing______________RetailCommercial
fish tankseco walkfish nursery roof planting
#1 housing + research
#2 fish tank + farming
#3 film workshops
cycling pathwaterfront
/retail /walk
film workshops
public space
#1
#6#2
royal docks#4
#3
#5
CHAPTER 04
A
A
113 CHAPTER 04
Plan
114CHAPTER 04
The Urban Farm:Educator and Producer
To the east of the quay sits flat and easily accessible land, a prime location for the implementation of an urban farm. The fundamental program of a food industry is a farm and better yet, one which will develop to serve as a producer and educator. The agriculture program that site on this site produces food, creates a venue for its showcase and consumption, and provides interactive educational activities. The farm occupies almost nine hectares. The land is divided into short rows to allow for hand-harvesting, there is a reinsertion of a vehicular road to ease transport. A seasonal pavilion is placed towards the north-western portion of the site to not cast any shadows over the field and to take advantage of a unique location on the corner of the docklands. The pavilion’s interior quality responds the variety of vegetation in-season. During the warmer “growing” months the glass walls of the doors fill with green vines. Light is filtered through the doors and an iridescent shadow is cast within. Users of the building can enjoy the seasonal vegetables in the restaurant or café, as well as shop for locally produced goods from the farm or nearby creative studios. In the winter months, when there is little vegetative activity, the pavilion emits a softer glow from the light of the gray winter sky. The vines in the doorways have receded, leaving the opaque glass to filter the haziness of winter. The pavilion responds to the environment around it and provides the user with an experience that enlivens all the senses. Another building is situated diagonally across the site from the seasonal pavilion. This building acts as a storage and processing shed for the farm. Its architecture mimics that of the pavilion. On the land visitors can walk through the fields and spot their favorite vegetable. Paths are cut diagonally to allow for variation in scenery, and sloped to give the visitor a whole new perspective to their food. The slopes range in height from a few centimeters to a few meters, giving an assortment of heights an opportunity to experience a variety of views. A child will see a row of beets differently than that of a full-grown adult. This way of walking through the field is meant to create a new level of understanding where ones food comes from, and how a person really is what they eat.
115 CHAPTER 04
Understanding the farm from the new view
Section AA’
Urban farm
Sloped path
Seasonal pavilion “Summer”
116CHAPTER 04
Vines growing in window of door
117 CHAPTER 04
CHAPTER 04 118
Sky Chef and a School for Hotel Management and Hospitality Training
A post-industrial site sits across the street from the urban farm and this project takes advantage of the large tract of land available to the west of the Tate and Lyle campus. The site is divided into two parts, one housing a series of logistical warehouses and the other serves as a training and education facilities. These two sides of the site are linked with a commercial kitchen that is able to transmit activities. The logistical warehouses abut to the east, which in the future could be used by Tate and Lyle. The services on the other side of the territory are predominantly serving the London City Airport, which is in close proximity. A Sky Chef service is incorporated into the commercial kitchen, providing pre-made meals to be used in-flight. Additional services for Sky Chef such as warehouses for raw material (supplied by the urban farm) and finished products, as well as distribution buildings are also created. For the purpose of institutionalizing the industries, catering institute and hotel management schools were integrated. Providing and making organic food will also be fundamental in the Sky Chef service as well as the new educational programs. An organic food corporation, which existed on the site, is relocated to a building next to the schools, creating a social courtyard. The new school facilities are connected to the organic food corporation by a slanting sky bridge, creating a physical connection as well as an aesthetic value. The same sky bridge connects from below the ground to a newly design multi-purpose auditorium on the other side of the road.
CHAPTER 04119
Shurgard Storage
Shurgard Storage
Seasonal food Pavilion
Travellodge
Travellodge
Plan Sections
Section BB’
Section AA’
Existing Section
CHAPTER 04 120
Shurgard Storage
Shurgard Storage
Etap Hotel
Etap Hotel Institution for cateringand
Hotel Management
CFE-organic food enterprise
CFE-organic food enterpriseInstitution for cateringand
Hotel Management
Multipurpose auditoriumconnected with the school
Bishop’s GateIron&Steel
Travellodge
Travellodge
CHAPTER 04121
Sections
Catering School Sky Chef (commercial kitchen)
Section DD’
Section СС’
CHAPTER 04 122
Sky Chef (commercial kitchen) Packaging Logistics Depot
CHAPTER 04123
POST-PRODU
CTION STUDIO
S
LOCAL TRAMWAY
CULTURAL C
LUSTER
CHAPTER 04 124
Introducing new Institutions and new Sectors to the Site
The area for this project is defined by separated entities: self-contained communities to the north and an industrial belt to the south. Two hidden anchor points currently occupy ends of a road that run diagonally through the site. One is the semi-active Music Hall and the other is a community plaza, which is already connected to the well-developed infrastructure. The plaza contains a library, shops, a hotel, and restaurants. This area also links to a pedestrian tunnel, which passes under the Thames and links with the other bank. Despite being well connected and with a variety of services and activities this area is underused. Acupuncture type projects are created to bring the separated entities together, and to create new conditions for the site, which will consequently help to transform the area.
CHAPTER 04
Music Hall
spaces for rent
local
coMMunitieselderlY people
cHildren
Hotel
airport
storaGe storaGe tecHnoloGY service
storaGe
dlr line
cHaritY orGanizationpriMarY scHool
loGistictate & lYlefood
125
CHAPTER 04
The Music Hall works at a local scale and holds a variety of events, ranging from music classes to theatre production. It site on a site that is adjacent to the airport, the new Sky Chef park, and the urban farm; it is in a prime location to be reassessed through an integration of food and film.
The other site for the project intervention addresses the industrial belt, which is used to store and process goods from the existing food industries. The goal is to regenerate the existing industrial territory and create a new innovative environment with conditions that will allow this area to transform spatially, economically, and institutionally.
how do these industries perform?what impact they have on the land?
foot t
unne
l
priMarY scHool
learninG centrevocational traininG
WoolWicH liBrarY
storaGe BroadcastinG local centrestoraGe
cHinese foodsHop
126
Existing condition
CHAPTER 04127
EFS
TATE & LYLE
SKY CHEF
MUSIC HALL expanding of the current understanding of the music hall
CHAPTER 04 128
META
L RE
CYCL
ING
BROA
DCAS
TING
POST-PRODUCTION industrY how do these industries perform? what impact they have on the land? how they transform the area?
Proposal
MUSIC HALL
Besides expanding the Music Hall by creating a new institution this project will develop on multiple scales: local and regional. By adding theatre workshop spaces, equipment storage, performance practice studios, kitchen and catering facilities, and other services provided in other examples of theatres, we can re-qualify the Music Hall.
POST-PRODUCTION industry
The industrial sheds are rethought to create post-production clusters to support an introduction of the film industry. As a result of this transformation the waterfront hidden by the industrial belt will be partially opened up. The sheds retain their existing structure, but the dimensions have changed, creating separated clusters and interesting spaces.
129
LOCA
L CENT
RE
DLR Line
METAL
RECYCL
ING
BROADC
ASTING
CHINESE
FOOD
TATE &
LYLE
post-p
roduct
ion indu
strY activation of tHe Waterfront
local traMfoo
d indus
trY
A diagram of Post-Production Industry
Relationship of Post-Production Industry with the surroundings
LOCAL COMMUNITIES
LOCAL COMMUNITIES WOOLWICH LIBRARY
connection with the existing food Industries
TRAIN S
TATION
FOOT TUNNEL
DLR Line
BROA
DCAS
TING
LOCA
L MA
IN S
TREE
T
METAL RECYCLINGTATE & LYLE
CHINESEFOOD
post-production-television proGraMMes-radio proGraMMes-advertisinG
-videos
-audio recordinG/soundtracKs
-pHotoGrapHY
-diGital art-voc. scHools
dYnaMic food industrY
LOCAL TRAM
CHAPTER 04
130
Post-Production Industry
CHAPTER 04
The shed is considered as a shell to house multiple sectors within. The structure of the post-production sheds will hold studios for the film industry, rentable studio, as well as school and public facilities. This will open the post-production cluster to the food industry. Cooking schools, cafes, and restaurants will be created to attract people and create new jobs. Moreover, the whole site will develop a transparent and porous building to accentuate the waterfront access. The existing industrial businesses will benefit from the new food venues but also the skilled work force that can receive training in schools on the site.
131
eXistinG condition proposal can only volumes provide the collective space?
Transformation of the ShedWHAT DO SHEDS OFFER?
CHAPTER 04
132
proposal...or the inner space should participate in space formation?
proposal. or tHe inner space sHould participate in space forMation?
CHAPTER 04
WATERFRONT...
CHAPTER 04133
CHAPTER 04CHAPTER 04 134
Emergence of spaces of different qualities
Section along waterfront showing the connection with the foot tunnel
Section showing interrelation of the outer and inner space
135 CHAPTER 04
Sections
136CHAPTER 04
EXISTING...
137 CHAPTER 04
138CHAPTER 04
PROPOSAL...
139 CHAPTER 04
140CHAPTER 04
141
HOTEL (AIRPORT)
MUSIC HALL AIRPORT
SKY CHEF (A
IRPOR
T)
FARM (organic food)
LOCAL TRAM
DLR Line
AIRPORT
HOTEL (AIRPORT)
SKY CHEF (AIRPORT)
-receivinG and storaGe-production linefinal deliverY of tHe product
-deep frozen food
FARM (organic food)
access to tHe river
MUSIC HALL (Multi proGraMMatic BuildinG)
-WorKsHops, related to perforMance-draMa scHools-Bars, restaurants-reHearsal areas-studios for recordinG-spaces for elderlY people-art studios-Main Hall-spaces for rent-lectures aBout HealtHY food
LOCAL COMMUNITIES
LOCAL COMMUNITIES
connection with the existing food Industries
LOCAL TRAM
DLR Line
TATE & LYLE
A diagram of the new Cultural Institution
Sequence of spacesspaces for rent --> different scenarios
CHAPTER 04
142
Music Hall
SURFACESdifferent qualities of spaces/sequences of spaces
connection:-through buildings-through secondary routes
LINESDifferent road layers
the hierarchy of circulation-local scale-metropolitan scale
DOTSSpatial quality
-formation of clusters-functional differentiation
This project creates an “exploded” version of a traditional theatre by spreading all of the essential facilities onto the site, rather than housing them within one building. This will provide the opportunity to create themed clusters that support one another but are architecturally independent. This clustering of services will create a favorable atmosphere for the airport hotel, rather than it functioning as an autonomous building in the landscape it can start to engage its surroundings. Café and restaurants supported by Sky Chef and the urban farm will help maintain the active atmosphere in the area.
CHAPTER 04
SEQUENCE OF SPACESspaces for rent --> different scenarios
SECTION
Functional scheme of traditional theatre
foYer/Bar HallreHearsal
rooMs
WorKsHops
tecHnical supporttecHnical support
foyer
143 CHAPTER 04
fasHion scHool
tecHnical WorKsHops
Hotel (airport)
draMa scHool/WorKsHopscafes/sMall offices
Music Hall + Clusters on the site
Hall
food
draMa scHool/WorKsHops
+ tecHnical
support
fasHion scHoolreHearsal
rooMs
144CHAPTER 04
lecture Hall/deMonstration centre
rooMs for reHearsal
EXISTING...
CHAPTER 04145
146CHAPTER 04
PROPOSAL...
CHAPTER 04147
148CHAPTER 04
CHAPTER 04149
BricK lane Music HallneW institution
MuseuM/railWaY station
storaGe placepost-production industrY
New Local Infrastructure
local centre
CHAPTER 04
The main link between the anchors and a means of stimulating the new environment built in the industrial belt will be a new infrastructural spanning the distance of an existing and unused railway. A tram will run along the railway and provide a local service to link the new mixed-use post-production territory to the east with the creative theatre cluster to the west.
150
BricK lane Music HallneW institution
storaGe placepost-production industrY
151 CHAPTER 04
152
Expanding of Institutions and Completing the Infrastructural Loop
The aim of this project is to increase productivity through institutions. Expanding the University of East London will provide a platform of knowledge and create a new network of interaction that will enhance the productive capacity of the territory. A crossover between students, professors, local communities, and economic sectors will be generated. An intervention will complete the infrastructure loop towards the eastern end of the dock with a new productive loop incorporating spaces for business incubators, educational facilities, workshop spaces, commercial spaces, and a pedestrian walkway. Architecturally the projects will engage users differently during various periods of time – day and night. The morphology of the project is derived from the pattern of the existing urban fabric. Structural lines and agriculture field orientation are defined, allowing for a composition of buildings and ground that create a continuity of space between the surrounding and the project. A new typology of institution is created from the combination of programs that create the new network of interaction among the relevant sectors. This new typology leads to both horizontal and vertical spatial organization that encourages a mix of spaces and uses. These are the demonstration spaces and research units for food and film, workshops, an organic supermarket, learning centre for creative industries, local facilities, and residential spaces for students and researchers. The form for the building is meant to become an organic, typological, gradation of the character of functions. Moving from food and film demonstration space to the more formal block of the institution. The landmark of the project is a learning centre converted from an old warehouse. This introverted box is designed to be the element that interacts most with the area. A double skin is applied to the form to create an interactive outer façade that overlaps with the solid box inside. This spatial concept will allow the flexible space between inside and outside of the learning centre as well as the waterfront promenade to perform as a learning landscape at night. The infrastructure is re-qualified by inserting a new pedestrian walkway into the vehicle bridge. This will change the relationship between the infrastructure and area from one divided to one connected. This project is the experimentation of spatial strategies and design intervention to address the issue of productivity of the Royal Dock. It explored the possibility to create synergies between institution, industry and infrastructure for the transformation of the area. By focusing on the institution as a key driver, in combination with the new economic sectors-food and film, it can be suggested that this articulation of space will formulate a richer and more complex understanding of how various dimensions- economic, social, spatial- can be integrated with design to generate a more productive urban ecology.
CHAPTER 04
EXISTING CONDITION
153 CHAPTER 04
Large institutions, Siemens Centre, Excel Centre, and the UEL are situated on the northern side of the Royal Docklands. Smaller institutions such as community and training centres are located along the southern side. In the eastern end of the Docklands there is a mix of large and small institutions. The segregation of the area made by the infrastructure of roads, railways, and the dock results in an exaggerated introverted operation of these institutions.
UNIVERSITY OF EAST LONDON (UEL)sequence of space
architecture and visual art
DLR station
LOCAL CENTRE
infrastructure
community
community
institution
left over space
infrastructure(airport & dock)
infrastructure
infrastructure
industries
primary school
adult learn-ing
child learn-ing
shops library museumold railway station
student housebusiness
dockland Knowledge centre
154CHAPTER 04
PROPOSAL
155 CHAPTER 04
Synergies will be created between new economic sectors and an enhancement of the role of large and small institutions. A platform of knowledge will provide a new network of interactions that allow cooperation between university, small institutions, communities, existing and new industries, and business incubators. Requalifying existing infrastructure will provide a physical connection to link and reactivate the disconnected area of the Docklands.
NEW KNOWLEDGE- BASED ECONOMYplatform of knowledge& new interactions UEL
docks
DLR station
business incubator
communitycommunity
local centre
industries
community
small institutionto
local infrastructurepost-production
music hall
156CHAPTER 04
RE-QUALIFY INFRASTRUCTURE
FLOATING PONTOON
HORIZONTAL HORIZONTAL
157 CHAPTER 04
A pedestrian walkway is inserted underneath the existing bridge, creating new relationships and access points to the water. The new walkway will also accommodate a floating business incubator. The businesses will be supported by a floating orthogonal structure. This will facilitate a flexible configuration of the cluster, both horizontally and vertically, to respond to the needs and demands of the business.
158CHAPTER 04
LIVING
local centre
residential
auditoriumdemonstration unit1 demonstration unit2 organic food
supermarket
service
workshops
LEARNING SHARING TESTING
EXISTING URBAN PATTERNnew articulation
CHAPTER 04159
LIVING
local centre
residential
auditoriumdemonstration unit1 demonstration unit2 organic food
supermarket
service
workshops
LEARNING SHARING TESTING
CHAPTER 04 160
PROPOSALLayout
161 CHAPTER 04
162CHAPTER 04
163 CHAPTER 04
NEW MODEL OF INSTITUTIONdynamic learning environment
164CHAPTER 04
165 CHAPTER 04
LAYOUT AND PLANmix of types and programmes
166CHAPTER 04
OPEN UP THE WATERFRONTto the communities and the city
CHAPTER 04167
CHAPTER 04 168
residential local centre learning centre
auditorium
class, workshop
demonstration unit
food
film
CHAPTER 04169
food
film
demonstration unit supermarket
SECTIONmix of types and programmes
CHAPTER 04 170
DYNAMIC LEARNING ENVIRONMENT day and night
CHAPTER 04171
CHAPTER 04 172
CHAPTER 04173
THE NEW PRODUCTIVE CENTRE
CHAPTER 04 174
175 CHAPTER 05
176
Towards a Productive Ecology
CHAPTER 05
CHAPTER 05
177 CHAPTER 05
178
Execution
The sites for our interventions take advantage of large tracts of post-industrial land that have close proximity to functioning industries and existing communities. The surrounding environments of our site create a greater potential to develop a critical mass of activity that would be essential to a new productive environment. Most of the post-industrial land is scattered with large sheds that are used for logistical purposes by various sectors, including food. By incorporating larger programmatic needs of food and film with existing sheds and enhancing them through an introduction of elements of the new sectors at various scales, we can establish a mix of activity based on functions and requirement. Food and film both operate in a multi-scalar and functional manner. Aspects of each sector can shift to operate at various scales. The scope influential elements of food and film have on the site will become dependent on their requirements by the new and existing industries, institution, and infrastructures. The residential community of North Woolrich may desire smaller cafes and restaurants while the proposed research centre, east of the Quay, may need larger logistical buildings for food related material. The execution of projects not only respond to the availability of post-industrial land and the architecture already situated; but to the diversity of programs that are inherent in food and film and the need to recognize existing industries, institutions, and infrastructure. The Royal Docklands is a large site, providing the opportunity to implement a myriad of new interactions. The new sectors of food and film operate across different scales, from the community garden to large sheds for film production. Food and film can be both large and small; by recognizing these features of each sector we can then create a way to implement their scales in variation across the large site of the Royal Docklands.
Our projects are executed in a multi-scalar manner to respond to variations that are created by the diversity of program. While the footprint of each project is large, aspects of each operate at different hierarchies. Smaller instances of food provide services in larger areas dedicated to the film industries, while post-production film modules set up shop in leftover warehouses around the site. The variation of scales in our project creates the catalyst for the greatest easement into a new productive environment. Portions of the site are segmented because of the introduction of the food and film industries, creating the transition from mono-functional to multi-functional. A site that has a higher diversity of functions will ensure a longer term of success. Food and film are such strong and independent sectors that they can maintain themselves. By mixing their functions across different scales we can ensure that dependence is created in this multi-functionality. Food will rely on film and film will need the services of food, yet each is productively independent of the other. We have chosen to integrate food and film on large footprints across the site in order to test our tools, themes, and methodologies within the inherent complexity of the combination of the new sectors. Using large foot-prints along with multiple scales allows us to consider different relationships that can happen in the crossover as well as new ways to think about food and film independently of each other. The large scale of the site gives us the room to push food and film to generate new idea, and in turn a new productive urban ecology.
CHAPTER 05
Scale
CHAPTER 05179
EXCELSIEMENSThe surrounding environment of our site creates a greater potential to develop a critical mass of activity that would be essential to a new productive environment.
Upcoming multi programmatic Institution
Most of the post-industrial land is scattered with large sheds that are used for logistical purposes by various sectors could be reused
requalification of the Sheds
requalification of leftover spaces ++
?logistics buildings
connection with research clusters
CHAPTER 05 180
UELAIRPORT
Food and film can be both large and small not only in terms of the size but also in terms of the impact.
+Infrastructure in Local Scale
+Infrastructure in Local Scale++
logistics buildings
cafes, to serve the Music Hall
cafes,restaurannts
The Royal Docklands is a large site, providing the op-portunity to implement a myriad of new interactions.
Aspects of each sector can shift to operate at various scales.
conn
ectio
n with res
earch clu
sters
connection with rese
arch clusters
connecti
on with
new Ins
titution
181 CHAPTER 05
182
New Productive Ecology
Food and film have the ability to stand and create their own urban environments, yet limitations are inherent in their functions. The new sectors function in production and consumption by creation of services relevant to each industry. The new ecology on our site is based on creating common points of interaction between food and film. Development of a productive ecology in the Royal Docklands happens between the new, existing, and independent points of reference between food and film. New elements of education, working in conjunction with the University of East London, create places where ideas and relationships between food and film can be experimented. These new educational institutions are situated to act as a link between the introduction of new food and film elements and the established communities and institutions. A mixture of the programs will have film directors mixing with future chefs, plants researches will be down the hall from creative classes. The diversity of programs associated with the new educational institutes creates classes and exhibitions that will provide outreach to existing communities. Creative workshops and commercial spaces for the sub-sectors of food and film are mixed to promote a cross over of skills and abilities. Residential spaces are made adjacent to provide for the craftsman as well as encourage an influx from the young and talented. The new productive ecology is based on the introduction of food and film, but most importantly what is done to integrate the resurgence of these new sectors onto the site. It is about rethinking their functions through physical and economic mixes. Promoting one place to become a base for food (another for film), but providing opportunities for smaller scale aspects of the opposite sector establish.
CHAPTER 05
183 APPENDIX
184
Appendix/Bibliography
APPENDIX
Viljoen Andre. Katrin Bohn, Joe Howe. ed. Continuous productive urban landscapes: designing urban agriculture for sustainable
cities. Architectural Press. 2005.
Koster, Egbert. Oostelijk Havengebied Amsterdam = Eastern docklands: new architecture on historic grounds. Architectura &
Natura. 1995.
Ellmers, Chris. London’s lost riverscape: a photographic interpretation. Viking. 1988.
Holzer, Christoph. Riverscapes: designing urban embankments. Birkhauser. 2008.
Abrahamse, Jaap Evert. Eastern harbour district Amsterdam: Urbanism and architecture. NAi Publishers. 2003.
Bruttomesso, Rinio. ed. Waterfronts: A new Frontier for Cities on Water. Cities on Water.
Meyer, Han. City and Port: Transforming of port Cities London, Barcelona, New York, Rotterdam. International Books. 1999.
Lopate, Phillip. Waterfront: a walk around Manhattan. Anchor Books. 2005.
Williamson, Elizabeth, Nikolaus Pevsner, Malcolm Tucker. London docklands. Penguin. 1998.
London Docklands Development Corporation. London docklands today. LDDC. 1997.
Al Naib, S. K. London docklands: past, present and future. Polytechnic of East London. 1990.
185
Budget's Enterprise Zone is vital to an Olympic legacy of prosperity
The Chancellor's strategy for growth.
7:00AM GMT 24 Mar 2011
SIR – We welcome the announcement in the Budget of new Enterprise Zones. The new zone in London will be in the Royal Docks. It is crucial that the 2012London Olympic and Paralympic Games bring sustainable employment to East London as part of a lasting legacy. Newham alone has an employment rate of60 per cent of the working age population – 10 percentage points below the national average. But East London has the potential to contribute an additional• 13 billion to GDP.
We must ensure that we get the incentives right for each area, to maximise investment potential. Last year, the Prime Minister announced his plan for a techcity, stretching from Old Street to the Olympic Park. We look forward to working with the Government to maximise the opportunities for technology to driveour economy.
Sir Robin WalesMayor of Newham
Andreas J. GossChief Executive, Siemens Plc
John BurtonDirector, Westfield Stratford City
Saving libraries is the way to boost child literacy (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/letters/8402311/Saving-libraries-is-the-way-to-boost-child-literacy.html)
Kevin MurphyChief Executive, ExCeL London
Richard GoodingChairman, London City Airport
Hamid KefayatiManaging Director, Buhler Sortex Limited
SIR – I wish the Chancellor had increased the tax on everything I don't buy and increased income tax for everyone who earns more than I do.
Rodney HowlettDarley Dale, Derbyshire
SIR – How refreshing to have a Budget largely free of hubris and sleight-of-hand.
Martin MoyesHolt, Wiltshire
SIR – With so many announcements made in advance of the Budget, what was the point of the speech?
In 1947, when Hugh Dalton, then chancellor, revealed tax details in an off-the-cuff remark to a journalist ahead of delivering his autumn Budget, heresigned.
Michael J. HawesNewark-on-Trent, Nottinghamshire
SIR – Ed Miliband and Ed Balls tell us that the increase in VAT is going to cost the average family an extra • 400 per year. For the 2.5 per cent increase tocost me • 400, I would have to spend • 16,000 on VAT-able items in a year, which seems unlikely.
C. H. ThorpBridgend, Glamorgan
26.03.2011 Budget's Enterprise Zone is vital to an Olympic legacy of pr…
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London’s Royal Docks to become one of country’s largest Enterprise Zones23 MARCH 2011
The regeneration of London’s historic Royal Docks came a step closer today as 125 hectares of development land adjacent to City Airport and withexcellent transport connections, were given Enterprise Zone status, following successful negotiations between the Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, and thecoalition government.
Thousands of jobs are expected to be created by this status which will provide a significant boost to the Mayor’s plans to transform the Royal Docks into abrand new district to live, work and invest in.
New businesses locating there during the term of the current Parliament will benefit from reduced business rates for five years and, most importantly, thebusiness rates collected from those newly established businesses in the zone will be retained by London’s recently created Local Enterprise Partnership forthe next 25 years. This will create an ongoing economic development fund which can be re-invested in promoting economic growth elsewhere in the capitalor set against borrowings for investment.
Separately, Haringey Council has invited the Mayor to enter into discussions to explore establishing a Mayoral Development Corporation (MDC) in theN17 area of the borough – one of London’s most deprived neighbourhoods. This would be London’s second MDC after the one proposed for theOlympic Park and would also be able to offer business rate incentives to new enterprises using powers being granted under the Localism Bill. Talksbetween Haringey leaders and the local business community are set to start immediately.
Together these initiatives will help create significant economic growth for two of London’s key regeneration areas in the Upper and Lower Lea Valley.
The Mayor of London Boris Johnson said: “This new status is the icing on the cake for my vision to return the Royals to their former glory as a thriving,vibrant place to live, work and visit. Already home to the colossal ExCeL Exhibition Centre and the new International Convention Centre, investors arebeating a path to the door of golden opportunities arising in this emerging district.
“Now with the financial and regulatory breaks granted as an Enterprise Zone there will be even greater incentives for new businesses to set up shop andcreate a thriving new centre of enterprise in this important corner of the capital.”
• The London Taxi Company announces Euro V strategy
Delroy Grant guilty! ˜
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Appendix /Publications
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Thousands already ride his Boris bikes, nowit's all aboard... The Boris cable carBy David JarvisLast updated at 2:09 AM on 18th April 2011
High life: An artist's impression of the planned towers and cable cars
A spectacular new cable-car system is set to soar high above London’s River Thames. The stunning addition to thecapital’s skyline will see gondolas glide 300ft above the water suspended from cables anchored to giant towers, givingcommuters and tourists a majestic new view of the city.
It will cross the river from the Greenwich peninsula to the Royal Docks, linking the O2 Arena south of the river to theExCeL exhibition centre in East London.
The £40million project – which has the full backing of London Mayor Boris Johnson – already has planning permissionand, if funding can be agreed, it could be operating in time for next summer’s Olympic Games.
Mr Johnson – who last year pushed through the capital’s city-wide cycle hire scheme, nicknamed Boris Bikes – isconfident it will become a major tourist attraction rivalling similar cable cars in Rio de Janeiro and Barcelona.
He said: ‘We are a significant step closer to being able to cruise the East London skyline via an elegant cable carspanning the mighty Thames.
‘It will be an exhilarating way for Londoners and visitors to explore our great city while providing a much-needed rivercrossing to support the regeneration of this quarter of the capital.’
05.05.2011 All aboard the Boris cable car | Mail O…
dailymail.co.uk/…/All-aboard-Boris-ca… 1/5
Saturday26 March 2011
London dock projects revealed3 March 2011 | By Andrea Klettner
London Development Agency and Newham Council will use Mipim to unveil plans for Royal Docks
Next week’s Mipim property fair in Cannes will hear details of the self-styled “last great developmentopportunity in London” centred around the Royal Docks.
BD has been given a preview of what’s in store for this area of east London, owned primarily by theLondon Development Agency and Newham Council and stretching from the Olympic Park to the largelyderelict docks themselves.According to Clive Dutton, executive director of regeneration, planning and property at the council whatis proposed also represents “the highest quality of architecture and design that lifts the spirits andinspires people”.
Stratford Village
Stratford Village ( pictured) will be the first phase of housing developed post the 2012 Games on themain Olympic site by the Olympic Park Legacy Company.
Located in the area near the athletes’ village and the velopark, the development will be 60% housing,focusing on families.A set of traditional London housing typologies – including mews, terrace and stacked – have beenidentified for chosen architects to interpret.
Canning Town
Developer Bouygues is responsible for the £500 million five-phase regeneration of Canning Town(pictured), with separate architects set to design each stage, together with a landscape architect.Working with Newham Council, Bouygues selected Haworth Tompkins for the first phase, whichincludes a new Morrisons supermarket and 177 homes.
Work will start later this year to draw up a long-list for phase two, which covers the design of a newhigh street and residential, with a winner selected at the start of 2012.
Silvertown Quays
At Mipim, the LDA and Newham Council are to announce a programme of selection of purchasers anddevelopers, including masterplanners, for sites at Silvertown Quays and the Royals Business Park.
Last year a £1.5 billion deal involving the LDA and the Bank of Scotland to build 5,000 homes and aTerry Farrell aquarium collapsed after failed funding attempts.
Gallions Quarter
Another LDA-owned site with procurement for a development partner underway.
Four housing-associated led teams are vying for the job, with architects including Feilden CleggBradley, Maccreanor Lavington, Allford Hall Monaghan Morris, Jestico & Whiles and Space CraftArchitects in the running.
26.03.2011 London dock projects revealed | New…
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The cable cars will transport 2,500 people across the Thames every hour, the equivalent of about 40 buses.
It will stretch two-thirds of a mile and have up to 34 gondolas carrying a maximum of ten passengers each. The 300ftsupport towers will rival the 440ft London Eye on the skyline, but will still be dwarfed by the Shard, which at 1,017ft will bethe tallest building in Europe when it is completed next year.
The cable car w ill cross the river from the Greenwich peninsula to the Royal Docks, linking the O2 Arena south of theriver to the ExCeL exhibition centre in East London
An announcement is expected next week on who will build the cable car system, which has been designed by architectsWilkinson Eyre.
There were concerns the cables might pose a danger to planes flying in to London City Airport, but a review by NationalAir Traffic Services said the risks were minimal, concluding that an accident would be likely to happen ‘less than onceevery 15million years’.
Transport for London believes there is a need for a new crossing east of Tower Bridge where it can be difficult to crossthe river by bike or foot, and said last week a ‘preferred bidder’ for the construction of the cable car had been selectedand would be announced following the signing of legal agreements.
Mace, the company building the Shard, are current favourites. It had been hoped that a private-sector company wouldfund the construction but Transport for London is still seeking a private partner and said that it would get funding fromadvertising, branding, fare revenue and sponsorship.
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Canary Wharf owners eye Royal Docks
The chief executive of Canary Wharf, the UK's most famous enterprise zone, has welcomed the creation of new zones by theCoalition as a "fantastic idea".
The continued success of Canary Wharf was highlighted on Friday in the group's annual results which showed the v alue of its properties increased 4.1 pc to • 4 .91 bn in
201 0. Photo: Ian Jones
By Graham Ruddick (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/journalists/graham-ruddick/)5:56PM GMT 25 Mar 2011
George Iacobescu said Government support had been "absolutely critical" to the success of the East London business estate and said Canary Wharf Groupwill "look" at becoming involved in London's new enterprise zone at the Royal Docks, which is just two miles away.
The continued success of Canary Wharf was highlighted on Friday in the group's annual results which showed the value of its properties increased 4.1pc to• 4.91bn in 2010.
The portfolio is 97pc let and Mr Iacobescu is exploring opportunities for new office and retail developments in Central London and the estate itself, includingan expansion of the retail into car parks and over the water. Songbird, the majority owner of Canary Wharf, posted pre-tax profits of • 464m, up 39pc on2009.
Hammerson plans • 350m City tower (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/constructionandproperty/8405254/Hammerson-plans-350m-City-tower.html)
Aviva backs Government stamp duty measures (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/constructionandproperty/8404960/Budget-2011-Aviva-backs-Government-stamp-duty-measures.html)
OFT setback as builders' 'cover pricing' fines cut (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/constructionandproperty/8404811/OFT-setback-as-builders-cover-pricing-fines-cut.html)
Buy-to-let opportunities opened up by bulk buy reforms (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/budget/8402403/Budget-2011-Buy-to-let-opportunities-opened-up-by-stamp-duty-reforms.html)
Cut VAT on home repairs, says RICS (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/constructionandproperty/8329335/Budget-2011-Cut-VAT-on-home-repairs-says-RICS.html)
Housing developments tumble 41pc, highlights shortage (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/budget/8394120/Budget-2011-Residential-housing-developments-tumble-41pc-as-pressure-grows-for-government-help.html)
26.03.2011 Canary Wharf owners eye Royal Docks - Telegraph
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Typology
“3 i”
Site conditions
ProposalThe sequence of movements
The sequence of movements
A connection between the post-industrial studios with the local centre/activation of the local centre
189
ARCHITECTURAL ASSOCIATION SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTUREHOUSING & URBANISM
Worked by:
Courtney Erwin
Olivia Fontanetti
Gaurang Nabar
Anagha Patil
Pornpan Thaveelertnithi
William Wehbe
Olga Yatsyuk
Tutors:
Jorge Fiori, Elena Pascolo and baby, Alex Warnock-Smith
LONDON 2011
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