Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios designs net-zero-carbon timber office in London
UK architecture studio Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios has designed a six-storey cross-laminated timber office named Paradise, which will be net-zero-carbon to align with its Architects Declare commitments.
The architecture studio designed the carbon-neutral office as it focuses on creating more sustainable architecture to meet the aims of climate change network Architects Declare.
"As founding signatories of Architects Declare, we have made a public commitment to creating net-zero carbon buildings by 2030, and it is our aim on every building we design," said Joe Jack Williams, associate at Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios.
"For the Old Paradise Street development, we have an opportunity to provide a net-zero carbon building that can host environmentally conscious businesses that can't afford to build their own building," he told Dezeen.
Set to be built on Old Paradise Street alongside a railway in Vauxhall, London, the office will be directly opposite Damien Hirst's Newport Street Gallery, which was designed by Caruso St John Architects and won the Stirling Prize in 2016.
The timber-framed building will contain 5,500 square metres of office space.
Its structure, which was designed with Webb Yates Engineers, will be a combination of cross-laminated timber (CLT) slabs and cores, glued laminated timber (glulam) beams and some supporting steel beams on a concrete foundation.
Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios calculated that the sequestered carbon captured in...
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