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Click
on images at left for larger color views. [Google Earth link]
In this year's issue of Architectural
Record's Record Houses, one project stands out: a 12-story
renovation of Christ Church Tower in London by Boyarsky
Murphy Architects. Nicholas Boyarsky, son of former Architectural
Association chairman (1971-1990) Alvin Boyarsky, and his wife
and partner Nicola Murphy faced a difficult design task, with
limiting physical conditions
and restrictions due to the tower's landmark status. Designed
by Christopher Wren after London's 1666 fire, partially destroyed
in WWII (image at left), the tower has been rebuilt numerous
times throughout the years.
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Fitting a residence into a 52m
(170 ft) church tower might not seem to be the most logical
undertaking, though when the client saw the real estate listing,
the lower half was being used for office space. Her adventurousness
certainly inspired the architects to be creative with their
intervention, especially given
that the whole residence is approximately 230sm (2,500 sf),
the largest floor plate is only 20sm (215 sf). This means
that each floor contains one function, as the sections
attest. |
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From the bottom
to the top are the entry and dining on the first level,
the kitchen one floor above, bathrooms on level four, bedrooms
on levels five to eight, the living area on nine, library
on ten, and viewing platforms at the topmost levels. Vertical
circulation is the natural consistent presence on these levels,
including an existing spiral stair, seven new staircases,
a (tiny) lift and a ladder.
Each new stair takes on a character of its own (open, closed,
wood, glass, spiral, straight) that respond to the unique
conditions
of each level, in some cases creating intimacy and in others
allowing light to penetrate to lower, windowless levels. |
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To return to the desire to build
a residence in a church tower, an important factor in this
decision must have been the tower's proximity to St. Paul's
Cathedral, a scant 100m (325 ft) to the south. The views of
St. Paul's, and the rest of London, from the top of the tower
are exceptional. It is these views, the fantastical condition
of living in a church tower, and the skill of the architect's
intervention that have led the client to commission Boyarsky
Murphy to design another residence in another Wren tower,
at St.
Mary Somerset.
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Christ Church Tower in London,
England by Boyarsky
Murphy Architects |
2007.04.09 |
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Click
on images below for larger views.
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