Seamless Integration: Where Structure Meets Serenity
Reimagining the Victorian Outbuilding: A Fusion of Indoor and Outdoor Living
Neiheiser Argyros embarked on a project to convert a modest Victorian garden structure in London's northwest into the Exeter Road Pavilion. The client, an art collector and DJ, envisioned a multifunctional space capable of storing an array of books, records, and artworks, while also serving as a vibrant setting for garden gatherings, fitness routines, and even casual ping-pong matches. The architects' approach was to address the dual requirements of internal storage and external shelter as a singular, cohesive design challenge, rather than distinct tasks.
The Continuous Cabinet: A Central Element Linking Spaces and Functions
At the core of this innovative design lies an expansive, uninterrupted cabinet. Conceived as a modern-day 'cabinet of curiosities,' this unit originates within the revitalized outbuilding and gracefully extends into the garden. It artfully accommodates the client's diverse collection, offering dedicated spaces for art, books, vinyl records, a DJ booth, a television, files, and a rotating display of cherished family photographs and trinkets.
Blending Utility and Aesthetics: The Perforated Stainless Steel Facade
As the cabinet transitions outdoors, its functionality expands to include storage for a ping-pong table, free weights, and various garden games, all harmoniously contained within its unified architectural form. Despite the varied contents it holds, the cabinet maintains a consistent visual presence, thanks to a perforated stainless-steel screen that runs along its entire length. This screen dynamically interacts with natural and artificial light, creating a shifting interplay of transparency, reflection, and opacity, subtly revealing or concealing its contents throughout the day. In this manner, the cabinet acts as both a showcase and a discreet enclosure, seamlessly connecting the interior and exterior environments through a single, continuous design gesture.
Architectural Ingenuity: Crafting Balance and Structural Tension
The cabinet's role transcends mere storage; it also functions as a critical structural component, housing various items while simultaneously supporting the new garden canopy. The design team at Neiheiser Argyros was particularly interested in not only uniting these elements but also in introducing a compelling structural tension, holding them in a delicate, almost precarious balance. This concept draws inspiration from Fischli & Weiss's photographic series, which captures everyday objects precariously poised, on the brink of collapse. This sense of provisional interdependence heavily influenced the architectural approach, guiding the creation of a design that redefines conventional structural expectations.
Challenging Conventional Support: A Non-Intuitive Path of Gravity
To realize this concept, Neiheiser Argyros designed a straightforward canopy form but deliberately routed the path of gravity through it in an unconventional manner. By strategically omitting a column where one would typically expect support, a subtle yet intentional structural precarity was introduced. This deliberate imbalance was then resolved through an ingenious counterbalance, establishing a clear and alternate distribution of forces across the site, making the structural solution both visually intriguing and functionally sound.
The Poetics of Materials: Marble, Steel, and Polycarbonate
The resulting architectural composition elevates the ordinary, transforming commonplace elements into something unexpected and captivating. The counterweight, for instance, manifests as a solid mass of precision-milled marble, elegantly nestled within the web of a galvanized steel I-beam. A tension rod, openly displayed on the opposing side, anchors back to a substantial concrete block buried underground, allowing the canopy to achieve a surprising visual lightness. The cabinet surfaces are clad in stainless steel panels, which not only mirror the ever-changing garden but also subtly reveal the collection housed within. The canopy itself is a thoughtfully layered assembly of raw and refined materials—marble, steel, and polycarbonate—each distinctly contributing to the structure's clarity and aesthetic appeal. This entire arrangement extends the interior experience outward, inviting the garden in through reflections and translucency. As daylight shifts and the vegetation undergoes its natural cycles of growth and recession, the pavilion evolves into an instrument of observation, a place where structure, storage, and landscape engage in a constant, perceptible dialogue