London School of Architecture

London School of Architecture
© Jim Stephenson

London School of Architecture

IDK

ARCHITECTS
IDK

LIGHTING
Egg Lighting

MANUFACTURERS
SLV, Sera

LEAD ARCHITECTS
James Pockson

STRUCTURAL ENGINEERS
Structure Workshop

DESIGNER
Natsuno Katashima

PROJECT MANAGEMENT
Lewis Kinneir

PROGRAM / USE / BUILDING FUNCTION
Architecture school

CONTRACTOR
Hexagon

JOINERY
The New School of Furniture Making

PHOTOGRAPHS
Jim Stephenson

AREA
915 m²

YEAR
2022

LOCATION
London, United Kingdom

CATEGORY
University, Restoration

Text description provided by architect.

The restoration and refurbishment of a late 19th-century church hall in Dalston to provide a design education center for the most accessible architecture school in the UK, the London School of Architecture.

London School of Architecture
© Jim Stephenson
London School of Architecture
© Jim Stephenson

Working within a tight budget, IDK designed an affordable scheme to convert a church hall in disrepair into a design education center for the London School of Architecture.

Resources were channeled where necessary, with the layers of previous piecemeal additions stripped out to return the building to a sense of its former self. This created the necessary spaces for a super flexible community institution.

London School of Architecture
© Jim Stephenson
London School of Architecture
© Jim Stephenson

The London School of Architecture is home to an architecture school, a furniture-making school, shared workshops, seminar spaces, a large adaptable studio space, and administrative offices.

Circular procurement methods were used where possible. All of the studio furniture is second-hand, with the chairs salvaged from a brutalist church slated for demolition.

London School of Architecture
© Jim Stephenson
London School of Architecture
© Jim Stephenson
London School of Architecture
© Jim Stephenson

The lighting was salvaged from department stores and remanufactured to near-to-new quality at a fraction of the market rate, and a fraction of the carbon (a saving of 80%).

Monitoring equipment within the building tracks fluctuations in air quality, temperature, and humidity, collating data that will inform the second phase retrofit strategy.

This approach to minimum viable restoration, careful measurement, and future action has been critical in allowing the school to open quickly and plan for a more sustainable future.

London School of Architecture
© Jim Stephenson
London School of Architecture
© Jim Stephenson


London School of Architecture
© Jim Stephenson
London School of Architecture
© Jim Stephenson
London School of Architecture
© Jim Stephenson
London School of Architecture
© Jim Stephenson
London School of Architecture
© Jim Stephenson