hostel
Peter Barber Architects, 2014
52-54 Mount Pleasant, WC1X 0AL
A former Victorian workhouse that has been transformed through LB Camden's Community Investment Programme into a state of the art facility for 50 homeless people laid out around a beautiful suntrap courtyard.
Chancery Lane, Farringdon
King's Cross
19, 38, 55, 243, 17, 46
Mount Pleasant is off Grays inn Road by Junction of Clerkenwell and Theobald Road and opposite Co-op store.
Mount Pleasant have a beautiful open Courtyard that visitors can explore and have a discussion with wheel chair access
Hourly architect led tours of Mount Pleasant which is a beautiful new supported housing project for single homeless people set within a secluded and peaceful suntrap courtyard close to Gray’s Inn Road and High Holborn.
The project is entered from a tiny lane through the arched doors of the Victorian hostel building. The entrance is a light, bright, and airy space which opens directly out onto a delightful roof terrace.
The tree lined courtyard below is the principal circulation of the project, its main meeting space is in a sense the social heart of the place with little spots for people to sit. There is direct access to a laundry, shared kitchens, a consulting room and the apartments which surround it. It is a place which encourages social interaction. Unplanned encounters between staff and residents which are a vital means of engagement and care of residents.
The hostel provides ensuite accommodation to 50 residents. There are little self-contained apartments for people who need a bit of space to themselves, accommodation in flats for those who are more gregarious, and there are larger accessible units for residents who struggle to get about.
The courtyard itself is formed by the demolition and removal of the central linking part of the original ‘H’ block hostel and the patching in of the long façades with reclaimed and new bricks in the London Vernacular.
Two new apartment buildings ... little houses really ... stand sentinel at the short East and West ends of the courtyard. A racy new building fronting Mount Pleasant reinstates the back of the pavement terrace evident in 18th century maps.
The scheme is conceived as a collage of old and new buildings – a kind of palimpsest.
Peter Barber Architects