Clifton Nurseries,
Bayswater, London
1979-1980
This was the first of two urban design/architectural schemes built by Terry Farrell
as part of an effort to revitalise temporarily vacant city sites. The client
was Jacob Rothschild. His idea was that if NCP car parks could take over prominent
derelict sites on short leases, he could do the same with a chain of nurseries
that would provide both a retail outlet and environmental improvement for the
community.
The project grew out of an earlier link with the Colonnades development – Farrell
was originally commissioned to design a new library to complete the scheme but
this proposal fell through. In this way, the nursery building is integrated into
its urban design setting as a local landmark. The cross section is projected
beyond the ends of the building onto huge yellow cut-outs that match the tiles
of the Colonnades on hoardings that fence in the site. Integral to the brief
from Clifton Nurseries was the belief that the building should be more than just
the usual cheap shed and glass lean-to; it should be something more representative
of the visual pleasure of plants and gardens and should be very much of the twentieth
century, as representative of its day as the great Victorian greenhouses were
of theirs.
An investigation of existing off-the-peg systems revealed the necessity of starting
the design from scratch. The axially organised undulating form derived from the
combination of the extruded plan and the use of large sheet materials recently
made available for certain types of new technology agricultural greenhouses.
Double-walled polycarbonate sheet for cladding was used for the first time in
Britain, fixed to a demountable steel frame. It was considered appropriate as
it combined high impact resistance, thermal insulation, excellent light transmission
and was relatively cheap.
At Clifton Nurseries, the concept behind the building owes much to 'Buffer
Thinking', Terry Farrell's competition-winning scheme for an energy-efficient
community of the future, which made use of simple conservatories, banks of earth
and belts of trees to control the sun and wind. Environmental control was achieved
by a combination of devices. Winter heat losses are controlled by insulation
of the polycarbonate whilst summer heat gain is controlled by blinds on the south
elevation and by a self-ventilating and heat-regulating system based on the principle
of a solar chimney.
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