Bureau de Change Architects designed the new workspace for visual effects and design studio Black Kite, in East London, curating a series of intersecting and carved-out cylinders. These configure a sequence of spaces with varying degrees of privacy; informed by the heritage of the site’s industrial past.
The client’s brief called for a specific working environment; production and visual effects suites that are isolated from external sources of light and sound. Bureau de Change responded to these conditions by devising a spatial strategy conceptualized from the site’s industrial past as an Engineers and Iron Foundry.
Geometrical forms of traditional iron kilns reprise themselves in the proposal as a composition of dispersed intersecting circles, mapped across the grid system established by the existing columns. Each volume contains a rectangular void, enclosing the production, editing, and colour suites in a controlled private environment.
‘We are proposing a scheme that extracts and interpolates volumes and motifs of traditional Victorian foundries and kilns to create a gradient of introverted to extroverted spaces, seamlessly integrated together through a bespoke layout and design language’ said Katerina Dionysopoulou, Co-founder and Director of Bureau de Change.
These cavities function as semi-private break out spaces, each correlating to their respective enclosed working suite; creating duality of space within a singular volume, separated by a lone wall. The placement of each excavation allows for a natural transition between the enclosed working areas, semi-private breakout cavities, and the central open plan working space.
“Each of the volumes are clad in painted routed timber surfaces, informed by the vertical seams of traditional iron kilns. The cut-outs are finished in a rough clay plaster, juxtaposing the sharper articulation of the cylinders with warm cave like textures further adding to the journey of materials, textures and colours in the space”, explained Billy Mavropoulos,Co-founder and Director ofBureau de Change.
The exposed production desks are undesignated, allowing for ease of access and flexible impromptu usage. The kitchen inhabiting one of the cavities is cladded in stainless steel to reflect light and act as a distinct centerpieceof the room by the entrance becoming the social core of the office.
Handmade glazed ceramic tiles circumnavigate the curved recycled plastic countertop. Carefully curated furniture activate the space and create a homely and comfortable atmosphere, placed among the cavities and the negative spaces formed between the volumes.
The proposed layout offers access to a gradating degree of porosity and permeability in work-space environments, incorporating and catering to preferential cultures, values, and behaviours of people. The spaces are not separated into different sectors but are connected seamlessly into one plan, offering a sense of discovery through different layers.
Bureau de Change is an award winning architecture practice founded by Katerina Dionysopoulou and Billy Mavropoulos. Its work is a direct product of the founders’ upbringing, passions and experiences – combining the pragmatism and formality of their architectural training with a desire to bring a sense of theatre, playfulness and innovation to the design of spaces, products and environments. The result is a studio where rigorous thinking and analysis are brought to life through prototyping, testing and making.