Claredale Street Housing
Claredale Street Housing, Karakusevic Carson Architects’ latest project in Bethnal Green, East
London for Tower Hamlets Community Housing is now complete and has been awarded the
Richard Feilden Award in the 2010 HCA Housing Design Awards.
The project is the first phase of the regeneration of the Mansford Estates and Peachey Edwards,
providing 77 homes (40 of which are family homes) in an estate of over 700 residences in a
deprived area of Tower Hamlets, East London. The Estates are characterised by 1960s high-rise
towers and lower-rise 5/8 storey blocks interspersed by ill-defined spaces and walkways open to
misuse. Claredale Street Housing replaces Bradley House, a medium-rise 8-storey Brutalist block,
introducing high quality mixed-tenure housing and greater permeability into the estate. Bradley
House was part of a cluster block scheme designed by Denis Lasdun in 1957. One aspect of that
scheme – the Grade II listed 16-storey tower Keeling House - has been retained following a
radical renovation in 2001 and defines the eastern boundary of the site.
The need to establish a coherent and vibrant urban design strategy was paramount in
integrating a new development with the established community. The architects worked in close
collaboration with the client, Tower Hamlets Community Housing, London Borough of Tower
Hamlets, English Heritage and a local residents group to push for design excellence throughout
and this has been delivered down to the final detail by a highly committed contractor.
Karakusevic Carson’s scheme redresses the impermeability of the former Brutalist structure by
offering a series of three cleverly scaled building blocks rising from a 3-storey terrace of houses
and maisonettes at the foot of Keeling House to a 7-storey block of apartments on Mansford
Street, linked by a perimeter block of 2 and 3-storey houses. The scheme reinstates Tessdale
Street as a pedestrian friendly route through the development, linking the public space fronted by
family houses and maisonettes to the landscaped courtyards.
Conceived as an urban courtyard with inhabited edges, the scheme seeks to humanise the estate
by creating a smaller more intimate mini-neighbourhood that includes a range of new public,
shared and private spaces. The design emulates the pattern of the Victorian East End terraces
that characterise the wider area, continuing through to the proportions of window and balcony
openings, helping to activate and reconnect the estate with the nearby Victorian and Edwardian
neighbourhoods.
The scheme has the same level of accommodation as the former Bradley House but delivers a
very different solution in terms of housing type and mix of tenure. At the start of the project
Karakusevic Carson facilitated a successful and proactive consultation with the local community
to define their needs and aspirations. From this a wide range of dwelling types were identified
and a design strategy was developed to accommodate a genuine mix of use from private sale
apartments, large family 6-bedroom homes and new homes for the over 60s being re-housed
from larger council homes. The design studies explored the viability of social mix, house type
and site density and how these could be reconciled with the desire for more public, shared and
private space that the modernist configuration failed to provide.
High quality materials are employed throughout, and where possible, with the least
environmental impact. Engineering bricks create a base plinth to the development whilst
copper cladding is fixed with an irregular pattern of joints to the upper floors, affording the
building a hand crafted quality. The courtyard elevations are characterised by European larch,
which complements the planting of the central amenity space.
Claredale Street was designed to ECO Homes ‘Very Good’ standard and utilises renewable
energy and high-efficiency gas boiler for heating and hot water that serves the apartment
building of 33 flats. All three building blocks have green roofs with solar thermal panels for hot
water.
Described by the Greater London Authority Planning Department as “One of the best examples of
estate regeneration”, Claredale Street is fulfilling Tower Hamlets Community Housing’s objective
as an exemplar for future regeneration, demonstrating to the wider neighbourhood aspirations to
create a more vibrant mixed community.
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