Heritage and Conservation brochure
Transcription
Heritage and Conservation brochure
HERITAGE & CONSERVATION INTRODUCTION The purpose of this booklet is to introduce you to Pearce Bottomley Architects’ heritage and conservation portfolio, not just in terms of our services and examples of built projects but also what inspires the Practice. This is an introduction to our approach, processes and ideas. Should you have any queries regarding anything in this booklet, please do not hesitate to contact us. Pearce Bottomley Architects Roman ridge Main Street Aberford Leeds LS25 3AW 0113 2812000 [email protected] www.pbarchitects.co.uk @PBarchitects PearceBottomleyArchitects Left: Right: Stonemasons at St Barnabas Church, Weeton Farmstead, Nidderdale WHO WE ARE AND WHAT WE DO Pearce Bottomley Architects Pearce Bottomley Architects is a multi-award winning architectural practice creating a sense of place for people. As an RIBA Chartered Practice, formed in 1958 with a history traceable to 1888, we deliver projects using a range of procurement methods across the RIBA work stages including traditional, design and build contracts and partnering agreements. At the heart of all our work are people: medical staff and their patients, school children and staff, congregations, the people who live in the homes we build, those who have no home at all. In order for this wide range of people to benefit from the design process, we believe that it is crucial to involve them in the design process. By promoting a close working relationship with our clients and the end-users throughout the design, delivery and post-completion stages the architecture, in whatever form it takes, becomes relevant, meaningful and long term. Architectural Design Our core service is based on the RIBA Plan of Work from inception to completion on a wide range of building types, on projects large and small and on both new build and existing buildings. We undertake site inspections, condition surveys and detailed analysis of existing buildings to determine repairs and maintenance strategies for many types of property. CDM Coordination The Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2015 require certain types of building projects to be notified to the Health and Safety Executive and necessitate the need for a CDM Coordinator to be appointed. Our team are Corporate Members of the Association for Project Safety. Project Management We can act as the single point of supervision for a building project, overseeing the construction, management, coordination, fit out and furnishing of a scheme. We have Members of the Association of Project Managers within the Practice. Public Consultation and Engagement We can act as independent facilitators bringing stakeholders together to explore ways in which a community or facility can develop. We have worked successfully with a range of stakeholders including housing estates, schools and community centres, high streets and health facilities. By using a range of proven tools and methodologies – as well as considerable enthusiasm – we help make the connection between the design and the people for whom we are designing. Design Review and Advisory Services Design review is an independent and impartial evaluation process that offers feedback and observations of schemes but does not seek to redesign them. Members of our team sit on the Regional Design Review Panel supporting decision makers across the Yorkshire region in their pursuit of high quality buildings and spaces. We also offer an advisory service to a range of clients (including community groups, local authorities and commercial clients) acting as an independent reviewer. Right: Leadworkers at a private residence, West Yorkshire Expertise in HERITAGE environments Designing for heritage and conservation We believe that heritage is more than just material remains, but rather a central part of our identity both as individuals and as part of a wider community. As AABC registered architects, we will work closely with you as custodians of heritage environments to conserve, develop and, in many cases, reconsider uses to ensure their continued contribution to modern society. Building surveying We have extensive experience of surveying all grades of listed buildings and Scheduled Ancient Monuments. We carry out condition surveys across all building types, ages and style. We also carry out Quinquennial Inspections for over 200 churches under the Inspection of Churches Measure 1955, and have been doing so for over 30 years. Repair and conservation As part of our building surveying service, we prioritise the necessary repair and conservation work required within a Schedule of Condition in order to help clients plan and allocate appropriate funds for future maintenance. We take an academic approach to repair and conservation programmes using practical experience and the application of current research. Conservation Plans and Assessments of Significance We understand that having a deeper awareness of your historic building is crucial to its future. We are able to provide Heritage Statements, Assessments of Significance and Conservation Management Plans for both listed buildings and Scheduled Ancient Monuments. We have a long standing relationship with a team of archaeologists and specialist engineers to ensure that there is a thorough understanding of your heritage asset. Planning and consents Whether a church or a listed barn, understanding planning policy and legislation can be a minefield. We have the experience and knowledge of the planning system to get the best result for your heritage building and, over the years, we have developed close working relationships with Local Authorities and heritage organisations. Sustainability It is often thought that reducing a historic building’s carbon footprint is difficult to achieve. However we have successfully installed photovoltaics and ground source heat pumps to listed churches, externally insulated heritage buildings and where possible increase levels of insulation to above those required by the Building Regulations. We are members of the Green Register of Construction Professionals. Funding advice We undertake works supported by grants including Grants for Places of Worship, England (Heritage Lottery Fund); Repair Grants for Places of Worship (English Heritage); Heritage Grants (Heritage Lottery Fund) and High Level Stewardship (Natural England). Our experience enables us to work with you to explore ways in which a scheme can evolve in order to access other funding. In particular we understand the amount and quality of work that funding bodies require as well as appreciating the time it takes to have applications approved. New life for old buildings We have extensive experience of bringing derelict heritage buildings back to life through careful restoration of elements that have degraded, and surgically removing parts that inhibit future uses. We are aware of the careful balance between the two, but if carefully and sympathetically done, we are able to give a decaying historic building a new lease of life. We believe that the design of a building and a client’s strategic vision should be brought together simultaneously, the resulting solution is then deliverable, innovative and meaningful. This in turn can only be done by collaborating with all your stakeholders, and it would be our wish to include all of them in the decision making process. Right: St Mark’s Church, Harrogate RESIDENTIAL FARMSTEAD, NIDDERDALE CLIENT: Private Client CONTRACTOR: Keith Seed We recognise the privilege of owning a historic home and the responsibility of its upkeep and alteration. Our policy is to develop ideas with clients, advising on how to achieve results with the minimum of disturbance to the historic fabric. The path to realisation can be difficult with some Local Authority conservation teams, but we aim to involve people early on in the process to smooth the path to completion. Early involvement with the Conservation Officer and explanatory meetings on site enabled the conversion of a large open roof space at a late eighteenth century Grade II listed former mill owners house, Birkenshaw. Partitions were woven around the vast oak roof trusses to provide two additional bedrooms with associated bathrooms. An extension to a Grade II listed Victorian villa, Harrogate by the prominent architect John Tweedale RIBA was designed using details in the style of the original design. The extension respects the form and asymmetry of the side elevation of the 1892 town house, providing a conservatory and music room above a gym. Minimal disturbance to the original features and the use of sympathetic materials ensured acceptance by the Local Authority. This scheme comprises the conversion, refurbishment and extension of a complex of Grade II listed farm buildings including a early seventeenth century farmhouse and eighteenth century barns. The farmstead is located in an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. Spaces have been carefully altered to reflect the needs of a modern family, with the living areas and a large kitchen extending into the adjacent former cart shed. The main house is linked to the cart shed via a new glazed insertion and a first floor was reinstated to the rear off-shot in order to create an en suite bathroom to the master bedroom. The previously unused attic storey of the main house was converted to provide guest accommodation. Permission was obtained for the construction of the new garage which encloses the new stone sett courtyard. The work also included extensive fabric repairs to the historic buildings, with the repointing of the elevations and the complete re-roofing of both structures with the original stone slates. The property utilises an extensive photovoltaic array and a rainwater harvesting system and, where the listing allowed, the insulation levels of the buildings fabric were increased substantially. PRIVATE RESIDENCE, nr HARROGATE CLIENT: Private Client CONTRACTOR: Emsley Building Contractors This project involved the refurbishment, extension and landscaping of a substantial Modernist private residence outside Harrogate. The house, which was completed in 1938 to the design of the prominent architect John C Proctor FRIBA, had suffered from previous inappropriate extensions to the house and alterations to the approach and landscaping. By repositioning the main entrance to the rear of the property, as the original design, we were able to reorientate the layout of the house to take advantage of the extensive south facing terrace and gardens. A key aspect of the scheme was to transform a previously dark and underwhelming corridor into a triple height entrance hall that opens out onto an impressive new staircase. Former garages were converted to a kitchen and day room, a master suite was added above the swimming pool and a third floor was added to the main house. Crucially, a great deal of care was taken to restore and conserve original features wherever possible. COUNTRY ESTATES AND HOTELS THE GREAT BARN, BOLTON ABBEY CLIENT: Chatsworth Settlement Trustees We have, for many years, worked with the custodians of estates, farms and rural enterprises to provide heritage building advice, masterplans for new farmsteads, and solutions for redundant buildings. We have long standing relationships with the Parlington Estate, Aberford and Grimston Park Estate, Tadcaster. At Parlington, we have worked on a number of buildings, most recently Parlington Hall Cottages with a programme of energy measures including external insulation and conservation work to the Grade II* listed triumphal arch dating back to 1783. We have provided a comprehensive review of one of the farmsteads to investigate more sustainable uses for the redundant agricultural buildings including some listed structures with an eye to commercial use. The work carried out to date at Grimston includes a number of condition surveys and refurbishments schemes. We have also worked with Rudding Park, Harrogate including the refurbishment of the Gardeners’ Cottage and masterplanning the luxury lodges in the Grade II listed park. We are currently working with the Bolton Abbey Estate to bring the redundant Grade II* listed Great Barn at Bolton Priory back to life. Dating back to the late Medieval period, the Great Barn is a marvellous and rare example of its type in the Dales and is in the Scheduled Ancient Monument of the Priory Barnyard. It is unusual for such a building to have survived in the north of England. The oak frames date back to the 1520s and the external stone walls were added in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. We are working closely with the Yorkshire Dales National Park, the Bolton Abbey Estate and English Heritage to explore potential long term sustainable uses for the building that do not necessarily comply with planning policy but would ensure a future for this historically important building. The options all include showing off the timber structure by carefully removing some of the internal eighteenth and nineteenth interventions that compromise both the integrity of the original structure and the use of space. All new structures inserted will be flexible, so that the building can continue to evolve and respond to changing needs. PLACES OF WORSHIP PARISH CHURCH OF ST MARYS CHURCH, WHITBY CLIENT: PCC of the Parish Church of St Mary’s We work with a wide range of Christian Churches which include Anglican. Roman Catholic, Methodist, Quaker, Chinese, Romanian Orthodox and Serbian Orthodox. We fully appreciate that the Christian faith is characterised by diverse social lives and close social ties. The way in which churches reach out to their congregations has changed over the years and the buildings which house such institutions need to evolve and develop to reflect this. We have a long history of re-ordering and extending churches in order to meet these changing needs, whether it is modest interventions such as improving access for all like the work carried out at the St. Mary’s Church in Winthorpe (Grade I listed) or major refurbishments that re-establishes the church in the heart of the community such as at the church of St Francis of Assisi, Morley. We have been working with the Grade I listed Parish Church of St Mary in Whitby for over 15 years, carrying out Quinquennial Inspections, specifying and managing re-roofing work and heating replacements as well as repair work to many of the windows. Founded in circa 1110, the church has a very fine and incredibly rare interior that has been largely unaltered since 1695. Recently we have been working with a team of specialist ground engineers to understand the cause of the erosion to the churchyard and crucially find a solution that would not detract from the very prominent clifftop location of the church. Stainless steel pins, geotextile fabrics and subsoil drainage have been used and the view saved. We also restored the famous 199 steps, known as the Church Stairs and Donkey Road, which have such an iconic place in Whitby’s mythology. These steps are Grade I listed with their first recorded mention being in 1370 although the steps are now largely eighteenth century. SCHEDULED ANCIENT MONUMENTS OXYGRAINS PACKHORSE BRIDGE We regularly work on projects that involve Scheduled Ancient Monuments in various capacities varying from condition surveys, Conservation Management Plans, Assessments of Significance, CDM services and restoration work. We were commissioned by Yorkshire Water, through Natural England, to prepare a Conservation Management Plan and Statement of Significance for the Oxygrains Packhorse Bridge Scheduled Ancient Monument on Rishworth Common. We work with a team of archaeologists to help establish evidential, historical, artistic and communal value of heritage assets and how this value can help determine their future. We feel it is important to consult local community groups and historians to ensure we consider the wider issues and also to assess local concerns and interests. Oxygrains Old Bridge is a single span stone bridge, approximately 2m wide, built during the seventeenth century to carry cloth from Yorkshire to Lancashire. We are currently providing specialised heritage CDM services for the emergency repair work to the Grade I listed Furness Abbey in Cumbria which is also a Scheduled Ancient Monument. We form part of the team that is working to stop the remains of the Cistercian Abbey, established in 1127, from sinking into the ground as the original oak ground beams have rotted away. We have also given specialised heritage CDM services to Sheriff Hutton Castle (Grade II* listed) and at Harewood Castle (Grade I listed and a Scheduled Ancient Monument). CLIENT: Yorkshire Water VALUE: £7K CONTRACTOR: Lloyd and Smith Ltd Working closely with ArcHeritage, we developed the Plan in two ways: to understand the relationship between the packhorse trails and the wider context: and to develop recommendations on the future conservation and repairs of the historic structure. As a result of the Management Plan and subsequent conservation work, the bridge is no longer on the Heritage At Risk register. PADLEY HALL AND CHAPEL CULTURAL BUILDINGS CLIENT: Diocese of Hallam Trustee VALUE: £40K CONTRACTOR: Stone Technical Services Working with ArcHeritage as with the Oxygrain Packhorse Bridge, we developed a Conservation Management Plan for the Grade II* listed ruins of Padley Hall, a Scheduled Ancient Monument under the ownership of the Diocese of Hallam in the Peak District National Park. The remains of Padley Hall are important as manor houses of this quality are rare. Padley Hall is also important as the monument is a site of pilgrimage in memory of the Padley Martyrs who were convicted of treason in 1588. The Conservation Management Plan included a robust condition survey and priced schedule of defects. Repairs were undertaken, resulting in the monument being removed from the Heritage At Risk register. The Conservation Plan also formed the basis of long term Conservation and Management Policies that have enabled the Diocese to continue to manage and monitor the conservation of this historic structure. Whether we are undertaking a stone-by-stone approach to an existing cultural asset or designing new contemporary facilities, we will work with you to create an enriched visitor experience. Our experience of grant applications enables us to explore ways in which a scheme can evolve in order to access other funding streams. This was the case at the Grade I listed St James’ Minster Church in Grimsby where the initial brief was to provide a new choir rehearsal room. However by embedding the scheme deeper into the community, not only did the centre become an asset for the local neighbourhood, but it unlocked five different funding streams to bring the project to fruition including grants from English Heritage. At the Abbey Visitor Centre, Whitby (the ground beneath is a Scheduled Ancient Monument), we worked with English Heritage to refurbish the abbey lodge. The conversion of the ground floor of the lodge for retail use, ticket office, orientation and information point re-establishes the entrance to the Whitby Abbey site from the north. As part of the work a new feature stone plinth was commissioned for the replica Borghese statue that was once housed in the courtyard of Cholmley House. Right: Washburn Heritage Centre, Fewston WASHBURN HERITAGE CENTRE, FEWSTON CLIENT: Washburn Heritage Project Group VALUE: £500K CONTRACTOR: RN Wooler & Co. Ltd This award winning heritage centre is an extension to the Grade II* listed Church of St Micheal and St Lawrence. The body of the church was re-built in 1697 after a fire which destroyed all but the fourteenth century tower. The church was already a vital part of the community but needed to diversify in order to reach out to visitors. The heritage centre is located to the north west of the church and connects to the tower on the line of the later Hearse House, which was demolished as part of the works. This connection creates a lobby, providing a clear break between the new and the old. Housed within this new extension is a multi-purpose conference space with exhibitions, presentation areas and a popular cafe. The centre can now offer talks, guided walks with lunch, workshops, lambing visits, concerts, solstice walks, coffee mornings and other events. The Centre and the Washburn Branch of the WEA (Workers’ Educational Association) also put on a variety of courses. Shortlisted ‘Community Benefit’ RICS pro-Yorkshire Awards - 2013 Winner Bronze Award - RIBA Northern Networks Awards - 2011 ST PETER’S CHURCH, HARROGATE CLIENT: St Peter’s PCC VALUE: £1.65 million CONTRACTOR: William Anelay Ltd The work carried out at St Peter’s comprises the second phase of the church development which sought to improve and extend the church’s role in the community. Through a careful re-ordering of the existing interior, the church is now able to offer new ways of worship alongside their traditional service and in particular is able to expand their already extensive musical programme. The works also replaced the north east vestries with a new three floor extension which provides the Church with a community hall, a range of meeting rooms, new facilities and a commercial kitchen. The insertion of the kitchen has enabled St Peter’s to work with the wider community by offering a daily hot breakfast for the homeless. The extension is linked to the existing church via a glass roof ambulatory around the apse to a new glazed street entrance at the south east corner. This not only ties the two parts of the building together but also creates a new contemporary street frontage. The creation of a new entrance also enabled the church to be flexible, allowing community access at one end without compromising the west end for ceremonial use, weddings and funerals. PUBLIC BUILDINGS THE FRIARY COMMUNITY HOSPITAL, RICHMOND, NORTH YORKSHIRE CLIENT: Primary Medical Property VALUE: £2 million CONTRACTOR: Robert R Roberts Our experience of working with heritage environments extends beyond what are considered ‘typical’ heritage assets to listed public buildings that have to - or are required to adapt to very contemporary needs. These public buildings include a number of healthcare buildings ranging from GP practices such as Sherburn Medical Practice, Sherburn in Elmet (Grade II listed) to larger buildings like the Friary Community Hospital, Richmond (Grade II listed). We also have considerable experience of working with schools that are housed within listed buildings but require some careful adaptation to enable them to meet the needs of twenty-first century education and safeguarding needs. Our clients include Meanwood CE Primary School (Grade II listed), Ripley Endowed CE Primary School (Grade II listed and falls under the auspices of the Ripley Castle Estate) and Harewood CE Primary School (Grade II listed and falls under the auspices of the Harewood Estate). The Friary Community Hospital was one of the first PFI projects of its type in the UK and comprises the refurbishment and extension to a Grade II listed former boarding school with a history dating back to the 1600s. However, the building had been derelict for some years before becoming a community hospital and GP surgery. The project therefore became a threefold design challenge: how to restore a historic building; how to convert a listed building sympathetically to an entirely different use; and how to ensure that the scheme meets the expectations of a 21st century medical profession. The restored building is designed to aid the healthcare professionals at the hospital in their objective to provide a multi-disciplinary approach. It provides a 18 bed ward, facilities for eight separate GP Practices, therapy rooms for dietetics, speech therapy, chiropody, physiotherapy and occupational therapy as well as facilities for a number of clinics including surgical, orthopaedic, medicine, rheumatology, paediatrics, mental health, family planning and audiology. The Friary also has its own Chapel of rest. ST GEORGE’S CRYPT, LEEDS CLIENT: St. George’s Crypt VALUE: £1 million CONTRACTOR: Baum Management This multi-award winning project for the homeless is an extension and extensive refurbishment of St George’s Crypt, an annex to the Grade II listed St George’s Church in the centre of Leeds. As well as the sensitive design approach to an important heritage building, the scheme was an exploration of how architecture can influence the way an organisation is run and the impact it has on users. The building has been an enormous success, with the charity noting that the openness of the design and quality of finish has been instrumental in improving the selfesteem and trust of the clients. Graffiti and vandalism have significantly reduced and, for the first time, clients were able to be given some privacy. St George’s Crypt has been able to extend services to the homeless of Leeds by offering health checks, training and support. Highly Commended ‘Community Benefit’ – RICS Pro-Yorkshire Awards 2012 Winner ‘Altered Building’ – Leeds Architecture Awards – 2011 Winner ‘Landscape’– Leeds Architecture Awards – 2011 Runner-up - EASA Presidents’ Awards 2011. Pearce Bottomley Architects Roman Ridge Main Street Aberford Leeds LS25 3AW 0113 2812000 [email protected] www.pbarchitects.co.uk PearceBottomleyArchitects @PBarchitects