Adam Coupe Photography
Adam Coupe Photography

Share_

Bookmark and Share

Blog_

Spotlight_

Forest Pines

Forest Pines

Brigg Lincolnshire

Q Hotels


Blog >> Architectural Photography >> Latest Entries_

Posted in Architectural Photography on Tuesday 8th November 2011, 7:27pm

Adam Coupe Wins M25 Photography Contract




Adam Coupe Photography Limited has been selected as official construction photographer for the M25 widening project.

The four year project has involved widening to four lanes on both carriageways in particularly busy sections of the M25, initially from junction 16 (M40) to junction21a (M1) and currently from junction 21a to junction 23.  Widening is also taking place to the north of the Dartford Crossing between junction 27 and junction 30.

Adam Coupe commented "We're delighted to have been selected by the SKANSKA/Balfour Beatty JV team.  Most large construction and infrastructure projects require construction progress photography.  It's great to be involved with such a professional team in capturing both aerial photography and monthly ground based photography to document the progress of the work"  The contract involves architectural photography of all structures, civil engineering and traffic management elements within the live sections of the project.


Posted in Architectural Photography on Sunday 6th November 2011, 7:19pm

Baca Architects sail-and-ride rail plan




Baca Architects has submitted a £2.6 billion feasibility study for a 20km rail connection, that includes the world’s first sail and ride station, between Amsterdam and Almere in the Netherlands.

The rail line will be buried beneath the IJmeer lake and its artificial islands. It will include at least five new stations — two underground and three above. One of these will be linked to a new canal with moorings, making it the world’s first sail-and-ride station.

The spoil from the tunnel will be used to create a new, car-free island, Pampus IJland, with 3,000 homes that will be illustrated in architectural photograpy. Some 25,000 new homes are planned for the whole area.


Robert Barker, project architect at Baca, said the limited amount of spoil meant they designed a doughnut-shaped island with a central lake. This “eye” will accommodate boats and floating homes.  He said: “The new island could be the Riviera or Amalfi of IJmeer and Amsterdam — a fantastic modern and sustainable destination for inhabitants with a love for water.”

The island will be a pilot for sustainability, being off-grid and off-mains water supply. Renewable power, rain-water harvesting and recycling will provide for the inhabitants’ needs.




Posted in Architectural Photography on Tuesday 1st November 2011, 7:16pm

Go-ahead for Southend Pier




White Arkitekter’s proposal for a cultural centre at the end of Southend Pier has secured planning permission.


The 364sq m centre was designed with UK-based architect Sprunt and features a wave-shaped roof built from triangular panels.

Floor-to-ceiling glazing provides a view through the whole building from the entrance facade. The building photographer includes seating for 185 people, an artists’ studio and a café and dining area.  An 121sq m, south-facing terrace opposite the entrance is arranged in a series of levels to provide an amphitheatre with seating for up to 100 people.


Posted in Architectural Photography on Tuesday 25th October 2011, 7:09pm

Planners approve RMA's Olympic nightclub




Furniture factory will become exclusive temporary party venue


RMA has won planning for a temporary corporate hospitality venue and nightclub opposite the Olympic Park which will operate during next year’s games.  The London Thames Gateway Development Corporation granted a temporary change of use for former Highly Sprung furniture factory buildings at Swan Wharf in Tower Hamlets, as well as approving the erection of temporary structures that will feature in architectural photograpy. They will become a corporate hospitality venue and club for 3,750 people run by Gorilla Events, Mahiki and Rhubarb, who said it was the first venue of its kind to get the go-ahead so close to the Olympic Park.




Posted in Architectural Photography on Thursday 20th October 2011, 7:51pm

Foster’s goes for gold with Arab airport expansion




Project aims for LEED ‘gold’ status


Foster & Partners has unveiled expansion plans for Kuwait International Airport. The proposals include hotels and a new 140,000sq m terminal, comprising three symmetrical wings of departure gates. It will initially accommodate 13 million passengers a year and 30 planes.


Each four-storey wing will be 1.2km long, extending from a central, 25m-high space.  They will be built under a single roof canopy supported by tapering concrete columns. The roof will incorporate solar panels and glazed openings that will be captured by an architectural photographer. The maximum walking distance from the centre to the far end of each terminal will be less than 600m.  Mouzhan Majidi, chief executive of Foster & Partners, which recently announced it had been invited to bid for a new airport in Beijing, said: “The emblematic three-winged form will be as memorable from the air as from the ground — a new symbol of contemporary Kuwait, which resonates with its rich culture and history.”


Inspired by the region’s culture of welcoming, the arrival sequence has been given particular attention, with a baggage reclaim area surrounded by cooling cascades of water with construction photography. The landscaping around the airport will progress from lush oasis immediately around the building to drier desert species along the approach road. The project aims to be the first passenger terminal in the world to achieve LEED gold status. There are also plans to create a metro linking the airport to Kuwait City centre.




Posted in Architectural Photography on Saturday 15th October 2011, 7:45pm

Cartwright Pickard gets permission for Sheffield scheme




Cartwright Pickard Architects and Elmsdale Estates have been awarded planning permission for a student residence-led scheme in the city


The £20 million privately-funded development is split over two former industrial sites on either side of Sidney Street on the southern edge of the city centre.  The northern part of the development will comprise a block of 23 student flats, that will feature in architectural photography,  housing 103 students, a five-storey block of 21 private apartments and 21 town houses, as well as a café/office space and a central courtyard.


The southern part will include 52 student flats and 42 two-bedroom private apartments built on the former Speedwell Works. Albert Works on the site will be converted into offices, a micro-brewery, a riverside walk and a glass house or winter garden.    “We have worked closely with both Sheffield’s planning, building photographer and conservation teams to get a scheme that is viable and meets their aspirations for city’s Cultural Industries Quarter,” said Peter Cartwright, director of Cartwright Pickard.


“The mix of accommodation is quite diverse and should appeal to both students and residents who want a great experience when living in Sheffield, in accommodation that challenges the perception of traditional ways of city centre living.”

The development should be complete by 2013.  Arundel Street, Cartwright Pickard’s first cultural industries quarter scheme for Elmsdale Estates, received planning permission on 11 April this year and  is due to be finished by the start of the 2012 academic year.



Posted in Architectural Photography on Tuesday 11th October 2011, 7:16pm

Green light for Make's Saatchi & Saatchi revamp




Mayor of London overturns council’s rejection


The mayor of London has given the go-ahead to Make’s Saatchi & Saatchi HQ overhaul.


The scheme for the redevelopment of 80 Charlotte Street and 65 Whitfield Street in central London, currently occupied by the advertising agency involving architectural photography, will see the delivery of more than 35,000sq m of office space, 4,500sq m of commercial space and 55 new homes.  Sean Affleck, partner at Make, said: “We have always believed in this mixed use project and what it will deliver to Fitzrovia.  By retaining and refurbishing the majority of the buildings we are looking to preserve the character of the area whilst bringing in new amenities for the community.”


Boris Johnson approved the plans, which had previously been turned down by Camden Council, at a public hearing last night.

He said: “The capital’s ad-land, centred around Charlotte Street, has developed an international reputation for creativity and I have no doubt that its redevelopment can only be good news for both the West End and the wider London economy.”

Approval of the scheme will see developer Derwent making a £1.6 million contribution to Crossrail.


Posted in Architectural Photography on Friday 7th October 2011, 7:12pm

Rafael Viñoly football academy in for planning




Manchester City seeks approval for 32ha project


Rafael Viñoly’s plans for a football academy on a 32ha site opposite Manchester City’s Etihad stadium have been submitted to the local authority for approval.


Plans were submitted after six weeks of consultation. They include a 7,000-seat stadium, a training facility for 400 players, offices, a media centre and 18 football pitches.  The site is part of a wider regeneration project involving the football club, Manchester City Council and New East Manchester.


Brian Marwood, chief football operations officer of Manchester City, said: “It is important to also make clear that the development and recruitment of youth talent is at the heart of our long term strategy of building a successful and sustainable football club for the future.

“The opportunity to build a world class facility supported by a well researched youth development plan would be a significant step in the realisation of that strategy.”


Posted in Architectural Photography on Tuesday 4th October 2011, 7:01pm

Work starts on £12m Penoyre & Prasad care home




Ninety-eight apartments being built in east London


Building work has started on a £12 million care home in east London, designed by Penoyre & Prasad for East Thames housing association.  Ninety-eight apartments are split across two buildings with a shared courtyard. The buildings also contain communal facilities including a residents’ lounge, laundry, a hairdresser and support services that will create strong architectural photography from an architectural photographer.  The mixture of one and two bed secure apartments are being built in Gidea Park by a partnership between East Thames and Havering Council.  The scheme will be built to meet Code for Sustainable Homes level 4. Photovoltaic panels will provide 20% of the energy used by the development.


Alan Holloway, partner at Penoyre & Prasad, said: “The site layout with its non-orthogonal buildings is conceived to provide a real sense of place.  “The buildings will provide a stimulating, yet secure and reassuring contemporary living environment for older people.”


Posted in Architectural Photography on Saturday 1st October 2011, 7:56pm

AWP (Paris) reveal Seine pavilions




French firm wins competition for parklands


Paris-based AWP and Swiss architects HHF have won a competition to design a series of pavilions along the river Seine in Carriere-Sous-Poissy that will be well suited to interior photography.  The buildings would be located among 113 hectares of public green space, located near Le Corbusier’s Villa Savoye.  HHF’s plans include a visitor’s centre, a restaurant an observatory and a dozen smaller follies with different uses.




Posted in Architectural Photography on Wednesday 28th September 2011, 7:57pm

Green light for PRP's Myatt's Park scheme




PRP has won planning approval for a new community facility and park in Myatt’s Field North, in Lambeth, south London.


The scheme will see the creation of one of the largest new parks in London outside the Olympics.  PRP associate director Richard Harvey said: “The community centre is designed to slip under the new park and achieve a Breeam ‘very good’ rating.”


Harvey added that the building was designed to maximise solar gain - useful for interior photography, while the sloping grass roof would provide thermal mass and public amenity space.  The centre will feature a cafe, creche, function and community rooms, music room, IT suite and a management office for the estate.




Posted in Architectural Photography on Wednesday 21st September 2011, 7:46pm

US-style housing trust scheme for Mile End




Maccreanor Lavington plans UK’s first permanently affordable homes


Maccreanor Lavington is bidding to build a series of homes in east London that its backers claim is following a US initiative where homes are sold for a fraction of the going rate to keep them affordable for years to come.


The practice has teamed up with developer Igloo and the East London Community Land Trust, a not-for-profit housing organisation, for a £50 million-plus Homes & Communities Agency scheme to turn a former hospital in Mile End into more than 300 homes.  The Maccreanor Lavington team wants to make one third of its homes affordable, with the remaining 200 put on the open market for sale. Of the affordable homes, a third will be put on the open market but at 25% of their true market cost. The scheme would be the first of its kind in London.


“They are predominantly three-bedroom houses and they will be available to people if they have a joint family income of up to £30,000 a year,” said East London Community Land Trust project director Dave Smith.  Smith said the trust was being advised on its bid by US housing group Champlain Housing Trust which was set up in 1984 to create affordable housing in Burlington, Vermont often captured in architectural photography.  The scheme allows owners to pass homes down to other family members or sell them to the trust with the vendor taking a maximum 25% slice of the amount the home has increased in value between it being bought and sold.


“The legacy is permanent affordable housing,” Smith added.  Proposals for community land trusts have already been backed by London mayor Boris Johnson, who, in his 2008 election manifesto, said he wanted a “network of community land trusts to give hope to people” priced out of owning their own home.  Maccreanor Lavington associate Kevin Logan said architects should prepare to look at land trusts as new work sources.  “It’s a very interesting model and I’m sure architects will be working more with them in the future,” he said. “It sits well with localism and the idea of local neighbourhood planning.”


Built in 1849 as a workhouse for the poor, St Clements Hospital, which is part grade II listed, closed in 2005.


What are community land trusts?

A Community Land Trust (CLT) is a non-profit, community-based organisation that develops housing or other assets at permanently affordable levels. It does this by separating the value of the building from the value of the land, estimated as being 65% of the average house price in London.


The CLT retains ownership over the land and fixes the resale price of houses below the market rate, so that home-buyers can have an initial subsidy and every generation thereafter can also afford the homes.  The idea has been used extensively in the US, most notably in Burlington, Vermont, where two land trusts merged to form the Champlain Housing Trust which looks after 1,500 apartments and more than 400 owner-occupied homes.  The trusts were founded by the City of Burlington in 1984 to provide affordable, safe housing for families with low to moderate incomes.




Posted in Architectural Photography on Thursday 15th September 2011, 7:34pm

Page Park files Glasgow theatre scheme




Designs for the redevelopment of Glasgow’s grade A listed Theatre Royal have been submitted for planning approval by Page Park Architects.


Page Park was appointed by Scottish Opera to improve the theatre’s front-of-house space. The new building will feature a series of stacked foyers, linked by a central staircase with a gilded balcony providing access to the auditorium.  Practice founder David Page praised the building’s “late-Victorian spirit”.




Posted in Architectural Photography on Saturday 10th September 2011, 7:40pm

Work starts on Populous' Manila indoor arena




World’s largest arena to be used for church gatherings in the Phillipines


 

Construction work has started on the world’s largest indoor arena in Manila, Philippines, designed by stadium specialist Populous, the firm behind the 2012 Olympic Stadium.  The 50,000-seat stadium at Ciudad de Victoria was commissioned by Iglesia Ni Cristo (the Church of Christ), a Christian church that originated in the Philippines. It will cost around £133 million to build.


The design also allows for gatherings of up to 50,000 people outside the arena. Major church gatherings will be held at the arena, as well as sports events and music concerts.  Engineer Buro Happold is also on the project team, alongside Hanwah Engineering & Construction Corp, which will be responsible for the building, architectural photography and interior photography process.


Project director Andrew James, senior principal at Populous, said: “The building’s capacity pushes the boundary of arena design. The form uses simple geometry to create an elegant appearance, while also giving the venue a powerful presence within its setting.”




Posted in Architectural Photography on Sunday 4th September 2011, 7:14pm

Nord submits Glasgow plans




Scheme to redevelop city’s Royal Exchange Square is firm’s largest to date


Scottish practice Nord has submitted plans to the city council for a revamp of Royal Exchange Square in Glasgow for developer Glenerrol.  The firm wants to tear down a sandstone terrace in a courtyard behind the square, featured in architectural photography and replace it with a mixed-use scheme featuring a 100-bedroom hotel - that will no doubt create strong interior photography, retail, bars, restaurant and casino.


Nord partner Alan Pert, who split earlier this year from co-founder Robin Lee, told the Glasgow Urban Design panel: “The proposal will connect levels throughout and fill the existing space which is currently unused.”  Pert said facade retention had been considered for the sandstone terrace but added: “We are not condemning the structure. However, our preferred option is demolition to ensure the project is viable.”


He told the panel, which advises the council on controversial planning applications, the proposals will replace “dark and dingy” existing courtyards which are currently being used for parking and refuse collection.




Posted in Architectural Photography on Thursday 25th August 2011, 7:51pm

Enterarchitecture expands on a building in Kentish Town




Enterarchitecture has unveiled images of a new rooftop extension to and remodelling of the Kentish Town Community Centre in London.


The project, funded by a £475,000 grant from the Big Lottery Fund, will see the addition of a new flexible community space on top of the existing one-storey building, as well as an enlarged ground-floor entrance area that will help create stunning interior photography.  The centre occupies a landlocked site, hemmed in on all sides by residential buildings, meaning it has always been invisible from the road.


“Even people who walk past it every day don’t know that it’s there,” said architect Megan Williams. “This project is about signalling the building’s presence, raising its profile in the community.”  Inspired by a music box with a mirrored, flip-top lid, the rooftop is angled up towards the street, with a large picture window allowing reflected views of the activities within.


The structure, formed of Kerto glulam beams, clad with grey Prodema composite panelling, sits on top of the existing York stone blockwork building, which has been partially dismantled to allow for new pile foundations to be bored.  The facade is perforated with an abstract pattern of holes to allow for ventilation and architectural photography, while preventing direct overlooking into neighbouring back gardens.


The scheme also includes an enlarged ground-floor reception and improvements to the centre’s other public and staff facilities, including enhanced IT and catering areas. The project started on site last month and is scheduled for completion by the end of the year.



Posted in Architectural Photography on Saturday 20th August 2011, 7:58pm

Zaha Hadid unveils Wangjing Soho complex




Commercial development will be built near Foster & Partners’ Beijing Airport


The Wangjing Soho complex near Beijing Airport has been hailed as a bright beacon to welcome visitors to Beijing.


Designed by Zaha Hadid Architects, the project will consist of two towers up to 200m in height embracing each other at varying angles that will be captured, when complete in architectural photography. The interplay is enhanced by a dynamic external skin which varies in density to create a shimmering effect.  When finished the projects will have more than 521,000sq m of floor area, with three levels of retail, shopping and restaurants connected by three-storey high atrium.  The Wangjing Soho project is expected to be completed in 2014.




Posted in Architectural Photography on Thursday 11th August 2011, 7:03pm

Apple's 'spaceship' campus by Foster & Partners




California city reveals new images of Fosters’ Apple HQ


New pictures of the Apple Campus 2 designed by Foster & Partners have been made available by the Cupertino, California, planning department.  Glass will have to be developed specially for building’s circular design, which is said to facilitate natural ventilation which will be illustrated in architectural photography by an architectural photographer.

The doughnut-shaped building will contain 260,000sq m of offices and R&D space, research facilities of 28,000sq m, a 1,000-seat auditorium and a gym that will be captured in interior photography.


The site will also include multi-storey parking and substantial landscaping including extensive planting of new trees.

The building, with a strong dose of retro sci-fi, looks set for approval. Cupertino’s mayor Gilbert Wong gave it his enthusiastic endorsement after Apple chief Steve Jobs personally presented it to the council in June. Wong said: “There is no chance we are saying no.”  The new headquarters could be complete by 2015.




Posted in Architectural Photography on Saturday 6th August 2011, 7:27pm

Farrells' futuristic high-speed rail super hub




Vision for west London’s Old Oak Common area


Terry Farrell & Partners has unveiled its futuristic vision for the transformation of Park Royal City in west London.


The area around Old Oak Common is earmarked to become Britain’s first “high-speed rail super hub”, together with 12,000 new homes and a waterside park.  Terry Farrell said: “High Speed Rail is not just a transportation strategy it’s a nationwide economic catalyst that requires creative place making.


“This is an incredibly exciting opportunity to reshape and unblock the development of a critical part of north-west London, and crucially to have a huge impact on the country as a whole.”  Farrells’ masterplan was prepared as part of Hammersmith & Fulham Council’s submission to the Department for Transport, backing the government’s plans for a new high-speed rail line from Birmingham to London.



Posted in Architectural Photography on Thursday 28th July 2011, 7:21pm

Foster & Partners' Bishopsgate project wins planning


  

Hackney Council approves Principal Place scheme, formerly known as Bishops Place


Revised plans by Foster & Partners for a £500 million mixed-use project in Bishopsgate, east London, have won planning aproval.


The 111,000sq m project, formerly known as ‘Bishops Place’ and developed by Hammerson, is now known as ‘Principal Place’ and has been redesigned to feature two blocks instead of three towers.  Hackney Council’s planning committee approved the scheme, paving the way for development of the 50-storey residential skyscraper - boasting 243 private apartments – and a 16-storey, 57,000m² office building.


The ‘City Fringe’ project includes a new square surrounded by shops and restaurants and the restoration of 233 Shoreditch High Street, the popular Light Bar, which would have been demolished under the previous scheme.


David Atkins, Hammerson chief executive said: “The support from the planning committee signifies the importance of Principal Place in the continued regeneration of Hackney. The scheme will deliver high quality office accommodation alongside a landmark residential tower in a convenient, vibrant location.”  Law firm CMS Cameron McKenna will take around 18,580m² of the office space.


Posted in Architectural Photography on Saturday 23rd July 2011, 7:00pm

Allied Works Architecture's Canadian music centre unveiled




Winning design retains historic blues venue


Allied Works Architecture has won an international competition to design a National Music Centre in Calgary.


The New York practice’s designs for the 12,500sq m project have been unveiled.  The building, due to open in 2014, will create a Canadian home for the understanding of music through collections, programmes and collaborations across the country.


“We have worked tirelessly over the last two years to create a space unlike any other in the world,” sais NMC president Andrew Mosker.  “We’re ecstatic with the results and with the experience we had working with Allied Works, GEC and the rest of the team. We truly believe this building will join the ranks of iconic architecture in Canada.”


The design pays homage to the western Canadian landscape - the crags and canyons of the Rocky Mountains, the hoodoos of southern Alberta and the vast open prairies.  It will be built around the condemned King Edward Hotel which closed in 2004 but remains part of Calgary’s musical history after serving as a hotbed of blues music for decades.


“It was important to us to respect the King Eddy,” sais architect Brad Cloepfil. “While reclamation and restoration is certainly necessary, we didn’t want to scrub it too clean. We don’t want to scare the ghosts away.”  One of the more unique features of the building is a two-storey bridge that will be used as an performance space.


  

Posted in Architectural Photography on Sunday 17th July 2011, 7:16pm

Alsop designs subway station for Toronto




Will Alsop has designed a £100 million subway and bus station for the Toronto Transit Commission (TTC).


Comprising Corten shells on steel legs, the scheme spells the station’s name, Steeles West, in giant metal letters projecting from the roof.


Alsop worked on the concept with the Spadina Group which includes Canadian architects Stevens Group and IBI.  It is the first TTC subway station ever built outside the borders of the City of Toronto and once complete in 2015 will largely serve the city’s York University.

Posted in Architectural Photography on Thursday 14th July 2011, 7:09pm

Terry Farrell's Earl Court masterplan goes for planning




£8 billion project will see creation of 7,500 new homes


Terry Farrell & Partners, working together with EC Properties, has submitted plans for the £8 billion revamp of Earl’s Court and the West Kensington opportunity area in west London.  The application includes outline plans for the 31ha site, as well as detailed plans for the Seagrave Road area.


At Seagrave Road the existing car park will be replaced with 808 homes centred around a garden square where detailed design work is being carried out by John McAslan & Partners, Paul Davis & Partners and Patel Taylor.  Farrell said: “We have developed a masterplan that draws inspiration from the surrounding communities to create ‘Four Villages and a 21st Century High Street’ which will bring new homes, health & education facilities, as well as remarkable new open space to London.”


Overall the masterplan will see the creation of 7,500 new homes as well as offices, hotel space, a primary school, library, health centre and 9.5ha of public open space.  Both applications will be considered by Hammersmith & Fulham council, while the masterplan will be considered by Kensington & Chelsea only.



Posted in Architectural Photography on Thursday 7th July 2011, 7:04pm

Libeskind synagogue plans




Daniel Libeskind has revealed images of a new liberal synagogue, which he dubbed “a synagogue for Munich, Germany and the future”.


The building was designed for the Beth Shalom liberal Jewish community, which will now apply for planning permission and intensify fundraising efforts for the construction.  Munich’s central synagogue was destroyed by the Nazis during Kristallnacht in 1938.


A £63 million replacement by Saarbrücken-based architects Wandel Hoefer Lorch opened in 2006 on the 68th anniversary of the infamous night that foreshadowed the Holocaust.  Serving the wider Jewish population, it incorporated a museum, community centre and memorial to the 4,500 Munich Jews murdered by the Nazis.



Posted in Architectural Photography on Saturday 2nd July 2011, 7:43pm

New Patel Taylor scheme for Essex University




Student centre and library extension follows firm’s previous Ivor Crewe lecture hall


Plans for a £14 million student centre and library extension by Patel Taylor have been submitted.  The scheme, for Essex University, follows a previous collaboration between the architect and client with the Ivor Crewe lecture hall.  The latest proposal will include an ‘integrated learning centre’, designed to allow creative learning using the latest technology, a new 24-hour reading room, a Students Union media centre, and a one-stop shop for student services.


The library extension will provide additional collection space and study areas, as well as library archive space.  Other firms involved in the project , which is due for completion in the Autumn of 2013, include engineer Techniker and consultants Fulcrum Mott Macdonald, Cyril Sweet and Potter Raper Partnership.