Archetech Issue 36 2018 | Page 29

Londoners aren’t looking for ‘luxury’ bells and whistles. They’re craving light, space, flexibility and community. But living close together doesn’t have to mean endless identical boxes off long, gloomy corridors. Get beyond the lowest common denominator, and you can provide brighter, more spacious, more imaginative and rewarding homes. Homes that can be attractive either to sell or to rent. Even by central London standards, the development at 33-35 Monier Road, which we designed for Aitch Group, will be a highly dense scheme nearing 285 dwellings per hectare. But Monier Road will also be a sustainable addition to a new community and will help to make Fish Island a unique place to live and work. The six- storey building will deliver 45 high-quality homes: a mix of one-, two- and three-bedroom apartments, 29% of which will be family- sized units and 100% of which will be dual aspect. In order to achieve this level of density and daylight on an island site we had to carefully consider and refine the massing so it could be developed alongside its neighbour to the north, Peabody’s Neptune Wharf, but the emerging development of 120 residential units to the east and the outline consent for a school to the west. It all started in Fish Island, within the London borough of Tower Hamlets, and one of the key zones earmarked for regeneration post- Olympics. At the moment, the area has an unremarkable assortment of low-grade industrial buildings, yards and vacant sites, and some housing. There is also a peppering of cafes, bars, clubs and galleries, as artists and other creatives migrate from Shoreditch to more affordable areas. But the landscape is changing fast as the vision of the London Legacy Development Corporation (LLDC) takes shape. Indeed, the current design (which was consented in November 2015 and due to be completed late 2017) is the result of much consultation with, and input from, stakeholders and the public. It meets all the criteria set by the local authority and the LLDC – for new and affordable housing with a socially balanced mix, high standards of design, and environmental sustainability. It will create new job opportunities and bring economic growth to the area through new business. THE SIX-STOREY BUILDING WILL DELIV- ER 45 HIGH-QUALITY HOMES: A MIX OF ONE-, TWO- AND THREE-BEDROOM APARTMENTS, 29% OF WHICH WILL BE FAMILY-SIZED UNITS AND 100% OF WHICH WILL BE DUAL ASPECT.