Bata Mews Housing / LOM architecture and design

Bata Mews Housing / LOM architecture and design - Windows, Brick, FacadeBata Mews Housing / LOM architecture and design - Windows, BrickBata Mews Housing / LOM architecture and design - Facade, WindowsBata Mews Housing / LOM architecture and design - Windows, Brick, FacadeBata Mews Housing / LOM architecture and design - More Images+ 14

East Tilbury, United Kingdom
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Bata Mews Housing / LOM architecture and design - Windows, Brick, Facade
© Simon Kennedy

Text description provided by the architects. UK practice LOM architecture and design has delivered fifty new homes on the site of the former Bata shoe factory in East Tilbury, Essex, for developer Hexa Homes. Situated next to the historic 1930s building, the scheme references the factory’s Bauhaus-influenced design by delivering a modernist housing vision of distinct, simple forms with carefully-considered public and private spaces, unifying details and shared surfaces.

Bata Mews Housing / LOM architecture and design - Windows, Brick, Facade
© Simon Kennedy

The design was taken to planning level by RAW Architecture, and was developed and realised on site by LOM. The scheme sits adjacent to the landmark shoe factory, originally opened in 1933 by Czech industrialist Thomas Bata. The historic site includes four listed factory buildings and required a contextually sensitive housing scheme that would sit comfortably within the wider East Tilbury (Bata) Conservation Area.

Masterplan

Inspired by the original workers’ housing, LOM has delivered a range of 2-, 3-, and 4-bedroom houses, whose ‘cubic rectilinear’ form references the simplicity of the Modernist movement. The houses are arranged in a distinctive ‘conjoined detached’ format, whereby dwellings only share one wall – the first floor bedroom wall – as part of a new hybrid scheme of detached and terraced housing for the area.

Bata Mews Housing / LOM architecture and design - Windows, Brick, Facade
© Simon Kennedy

The use of dark grey and metallic materials recall the site’s industrial heritage, including the balconies, window frames and steelwork of the entrance gates. The exterior of the houses alternate between a white render and a contrasting brick finish to provide richness, texture and a reference to the well-known Bata houses in Zlin, Czech Republic. Photovoltaic panels are fitted to the shallow pitched roofs, and planting used to break up the hard landscape materials and built forms.

Bata Mews Housing / LOM architecture and design - Windows, Facade
© Simon Kennedy

LOM adopted a standardised design approach in order to achieve a simplicity of form throughout Bata Mews, while simultaneously delivering a cost-efficient build for the developer. Given the historic nature of the site, English Heritage were involved throughout the design and planning process. Bata’s arrival in the area in the early 1930s, along with the associated housing and community infrastructure development, sparked the area’s growth from small rural settlements into a thriving industrial community.

Bata Mews Housing / LOM architecture and design - Facade, Windows
© Simon Kennedy

Although Bata ceased operating on the site in 2007, LOM’s scheme aims to revitalise this post-industrial landscape by providing new, family-friendly homes which seek to foster a revitalised sense of community. Simon Bird, Director, LOM architecture and design, says: “Our goal was to deliver attractively-priced modernist houses. Re-assessing the design principles set out by RAW, we maximised standardisation, retained the simplicity of form and developed an achievable level of quality across all details to enable a cost-efficient solution to the project’s various technical constraints, while respecting the Bauhaus intent and philosophy.”

Bata Mews Housing / LOM architecture and design - Windows, Brick, Facade
© Simon Kennedy

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Cite: "Bata Mews Housing / LOM architecture and design" 04 Dec 2019. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/929508/bata-mews-housing-lom-architecture-and-design> ISSN 0719-8884

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