Owen Faunt

The Value of Competitions: Midland Road | Bristol

Background

In July 2023, Brighter Places in partnership with the Bristol Housing Festival launched a design competition, for a new affordable development within Bristol City center.

Midland Road is a prominent local centre, adjacent to Old Market and previous home to a paintworks, since demolished. The brief was to provide a 100% affordable / social rented development of up to 70 units.

Having previously worked with Brighter Places, our aim was to create both a destination location within the wider local community, and a design that sensitively responds to its local context and needs.

Process

For this scheme an understanding of local and broader contexts was key. We began by reviewing the typology and scale of the surrounding environment, the sites’ access to green spaces and the overall local transport links.

From this we recognized that Midland Roads presents a unique focus point of transport links, creating an idealized meeting place for residents & passers alike, with opportunity for commercial / community led interventions.

Similarly, our initial studies identified a lack of local green space links (both public and private). These spaces are critical to community growth & function, as such the provision of accessible green space was critical to the design.

Understanding the immediate context was also key. Surrounding structures presented a high density of 5+ stories, with a mostly industrial context, infilled with more modern midrise housing developments.

Our initial Massing would follow the relatively limited footprint of the site, whilst cutting out key foot / cycle connections to permeate the structure and allowing for a central courtyard to create meeting and commercial opportunities.

Looking at the opportunities & constraints available to us, we quickly identified 3 key strategies to develop:

  1. Green Spaces for all: green spaces are often a luxury in urban centers. Our aim was to create a mixture of both public and private green spaces within the scheme, by using the roofs as interconnected terraces to create over 900sqm of space for residents & a ground floor courtyard for the public.

  2. Fostering Community: modern housing often lacks community, with disconnected structures and sterile circulation. Our aim was to create a winding path laced with social spaces throughout the structure that then further connected to proposed green spaces. The aim was to create an interconnected set of communal streets to enhance interaction.

  3. Activated Streets: The site is uniquely located at the intersection between transport links, from foot to local buses. This presents the opportunity to create a local hub, the proposal would need to be open in nature, with ground floor uses that would encourage residents and non-residents alike inside.

The Design

The final design appeals to the industrial character of the site, using an exposed frame with infill patterned brick panels. The mass is broken down by circulation cut through’s at ground level, and circulation at upper levels, conjunction with the perforated forms of the flats this gives the structure a high degree of permeability. The structure itself steps down with the context, beginning with 10 stories, gradually reducing to 6 stories.

Starting at the ground level is a mixture of public courtyards and commercial units, moving up the structure is a winding path of private roof gardens & circulation paths, each flat within the block has to move up or down a maximum of one storey to access a green space.

Each flat has its own balcony, and by mixing walk up and same storey accesses, there is only a singular circulation corridor per 2 levels of flats, maximizing social opportunities to shared areas.

 

The Submission

The final design was submitted in August. Unfortunately, gcp were not selected for the final shortlist this time. Designing a dense urban proposal in the center of Bristol was both invaluable and enjoyable; an experience that we can take with us into future projects.

Complete: Westbury Swimarium

Sarah Harris and Rick Johnstone, of the Swim School Ltd, came to gcp with a challenge: to design and deliver their ‘Swimarium’ in Westbury, Wiltshire. Being a retrofit of a former warehouse made the brief a little unusual.  The pool itself had already been procured, leaving the challenge of accommodating the ancillary facilities and plant in the remaining space.

The pool occupies approximately a 100m2 footprint, within a building that has a 230m2 gross internal area. Necessary accommodation also included: An entrance hallway, an accessible wc, 2 changing rooms, a viewing gallery, lockers, a plant room, a chemical store, raised teaching walkways and compliant escape routes; making the spatial tolerances are extremely fine. 

gcp undertook all the design work from the initial feasibility study through to concept, planning and technical design stage. The warehouse underwent an extensive thermal and structural upgrade, with half the roof accommodating solar pv panels. gcp also supported the construction team throughout, with the design calling for some unique detailing around the piled pool slab, teaching walkways and external walls. All credit goes to the contractor, Hill Project Management, who ran the build stage diligently and professionally, under significant time constraints.

Recently we were also pleased to be invited along to the grand opening. With a long waiting list and thousands of satisfied customers, we hope that this will be one of many more Swimariums to come!

The Paddock by Owen Faunt, Architectural Apprentice

gcp are passionate about housing and passionate about developing people. The Paddock, is a bespoke scheme of three homes, designed for a small local developer. It consists of three houses set on a piece of open grassland, in an outer Bristol suburb. With an engaged and enthusiastic client, this project has been the perfect case study for the professional practice element of my Architectural Apprenticeship. gcp have actively involved me with every stage of the design process, from a pre-planning application through to construction and beyond. All under the fervent mentoring of two of the practice’s most experienced and expert architectural staff.

Planning Granted for a modest residential development in Blackhorse Place

 A planning application has been granted by South Glos Council for a small development of 3 bespoke homes on Blackhorse Place, Vinney Green. What was initially seen as a relatively uncontentious and modest development for 3 new homes, actually required a relatively complex planning application and multiple design iterations.

gcp conceived and developed a pre-application followed by the planning design. Particular attention was paid to the immediate context, neighbours’ concerns, a sustainable urban drainage system, site ecology and sustainable transportation.

The team constantly developed the design, in close liaison with all parties and proactively managed the planning process, negotiating directing with the planning team. Ultimately, delivering a planning approval for a design which both met the client’s aspirations and was acceptable to the local authority.

Apprenticeship blog by Owen Faunt

We are proud to be supporting Owen through his Architectural Apprenticeship at South Bank University, London. As part of National Apprenticeship Week 2021, we asked Owen to give us an account of his last year, a sterling effort given the challenging circumstances.

It seems strange that only a year ago I was posting for National Apprenticeship Week under very different circumstances. The past year, has at times, seemed to crawl along but on reflection the time has almost evaporated! For someone who is very much learning their trade, there are immediately obvious challenges - not knowing what to do at times, wondering if I’m doing enough/the right things, wondering how I will get in all my required training hours. However, I count myself as extremely lucky to have been able to get a solid chunk of time under my belt before having to work from home. I can’t imagine trying to learn Revit from scratch, without any of my wonderfully understanding colleagues on hand. The same is true of university, while things like model making remotely present their own challenges, with no design studio this year, remote lectures have been fairly straightforward. More importantly I’ve got a great group of friends which afford me a support bubble. I really feel for the 2020 cohort that have literally never stepped on campus, never met their peers and have had to prepare for design crits 100% remotely. For me, the people around me (virtually) at university have been nothing short of essential to my sanity and my academic survival.

It wasn’t until I started writing this blog post, that I realised it might stir up some emotion in me but reflecting on the last year seems to have done just that. I’ve had an extremely easy ride compared to millions of others, I’ve even enjoyed swathes of this strange year but I think (like most), I now realise that it has fatigued me significantly mentally. With vaccines now being rolled out, I look forward to next year’s National Apprenticeship Week post with cautious but relentless optimism, we will get there. Hopefully I’ve not strayed too far off topic and if I’ve learnt anything in the past year, it’s that people around us are often what gives us our strength. With this in mind I would like to urge you to continue to stay safe, look after yourself and others.

Owen Faunt, gcp Chartered Architects

He has produced some fantastic work, below are some of the highlights, keep up the amazing work Owen!

End of year blog 2020

A year like no other is coming to an end and I just wanted to say that, despite the numerous challenges presented to us, the whole team has responded magnificently demonstrating a deep-routed culture of mutual support and understanding. My thanks and appreciation go to you all. I have known for ages that it was all about the people and so I want to mention some of the ways that we have progressed as an organisation to put us in such a strong position looking forward to 2021 and the part that the individuals have played in that.

Everyone has developed a ‘teams’ persona whether it’s during a virtual rendezvous with genial GP ‘doctor’ Martin Spear, ‘cat juggling’ Esther Brown, ‘squeezed under the stairs’ whispering Michael Hanson or ‘wild man of the woods’ Jonathan Platt. Sometimes they all appear at once on screen like a mad version of University Challenge.

I thought some like borrowing the cool neutral background of a beautifully tasteful modern kitchen until I eventually realised that in Olia Kyritsi’s case it was actually her real kitchen.  Some like Tom Mellor, Tom Hubbard and Matt Andrews like fading out the domestic child strewn chaos in which they obviously live while Owen Faunt either has many rooms in his house or a different selection of bold wallpapers in each. Sarah Markroum looks as though she is just about to pick up an instrument and sing us a song and Matt Bonney has been sitting next to his match pot decorated wall for most of the year.

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Natalie Lock likes to share her domestic bliss with us occasionally interrupted by child or husband or both and recently we have been able to share the homes of Maria Steward, who’s husband lives, we now know, behind a door curiously located half way up the wall in her kitchen, or Siobhan Tarr who has brought the garden inside her house with her spectacularly green fingers.  James Pilling resides in his person shed in the middle of a building site with bike poised for an early morning spin whilst Jon Briscoe organises our every waking hour with benevolent decisiveness and our recently distanced genial voice of reason and wisdom Colin Powell looks over us and after us. 

What a dream teams team!

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This year really has been full of achievement. Financially we have, more or less, broken even which has been no mean feat on its own.  During a year when we have completed a refurbishment of the office, had to work in bubbles, incurred the considerable cost of converting the business into an Employee Owned Trust and set everyone up with the IT infrastructure to work fairly seamlessly from home or from Corum 2, this performance has been even more remarkable.

The year stared with James Pilling achieving a Part 1 Architectural qualification by distance learning with Oxford Brookes and ended with Esther Brown becoming a fully qualified Architect.  In the middle Sarah Makroum passed her first year of Part 2, again at Oxford Brookes and Own Faunt his first year apprentice Part 1 at South Bank University, both with flying colours.  Matt Bonney and Olia Kyrirtsi became qualified Passivhaus designers and Tom Hubbard became a certified Architectural Technologist.  Congratulations to you all.

Shout outs go to Michael Hanson for his tireless responses to your never-ending technical queries and Michael again with Tom Mellor for masterminding the IT development and eventual delivery of a VOIP telephone system.  Don’t ring us ( and expect to get transferred ) we’ll ring you back!  Lastly a big mention for Esther Brown, Natalie Lock, Matt Bonney and James Pilling for boosting our social media presence to the status of influencers – who would have believed it!

And then there was the actual work!

Happy Christmas to you and yours and I look forward to eventually meeting up with you all in 2021.

Jeremy Pilling

2020 Favourites: Elizabeth House, Holborn

ELIZABETH HOUSE, HOLBORN

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We have really enjoyed the challenges posed by this project to maximise the available lettable space of this office building in central London. Devising a method to add a rear extension and two storeys on the roof where the only access to the site is through a pedestrian archway was an interesting technical challenge requiring close coordination with a great project team
— Tom Mellor, gcp
Elizabeth House London

We asked everyone in the office to name their favourite project of 2020. Tom has chosen Elizabeth House, known in the area as Fulwood Place in Holborn.

Meet the Team: Owen

Owen Faunt joined gcp last year as an Architectural Apprentice. He calls himself a “thirty-something photography graduate and a father of two young children” and had previously made a career for himself as a Commercial Insurance Underwriter. 

A creative at heart, this part-time photographer and lover of sustainable design embarked on a career change and set about pursuing an Architectural Apprenticeship Degree with London South Bank University. Owen attends Uni 1 day a week and spends 4 days in the practice.  

This was an exciting prospect for both Owen and gcp; we are incredibly supportive of opportunities to accommodate personal and professional growth. 

To celebrate Owen’s 1-year anniversary, we asked him a few questions. 


From Owen’s Portfolio

Hi Owen. So, what’s your role in gcp?

I’m an Architectural Assistant (Apprentice). I’m told I also make good drinks

I can’t believe it’s been a year! 

Nor can I! Tell us, what has been your best moment at gcp in the last year?  

Handing in my first-year coursework pieces. Managing university alongside full time work and two young children (now 2 & 3 years old), has been incredibly challenging. I’m extremely lucky to have an extremely supportive family.  

And what are you looking forward to in the next year? Personally, or professionally. 

Personally: Getting out on the bike, perhaps getting away on holiday with the family.  

Professionally: Hopefully getting a good result back from Uni but more importantly making myself more useful to the team over the course of the next year.  

You mention your bike and your family, tell us a little about what you like to do in your spare time.  

Obviously, my family are my main interest and occupy the majority of my time. I also like cycling, (particularly mountain biking). I’m a keen photographer, (having previously studied the subject for my first degree). I hike (sometimes) and I love anything food and drink related.  

So, what’s your proudest personal achievement? 

Honestly, I’m still amazed that I’ve managed to change my career to pursue architecture in my mid-thirties. I couldn’t have done this without my wonderful wife Lisa pushing me and making me believe in myself but after a year with gcp, I’m now able to look back on the sequence of events that led to this point with huge pride. I’m under no illusion that there’s still a long way to go on this journey but I now feel like I’ve got the momentum required to carry me through to qualification.  

I personally find it incredibly brave and inspirational. You have such enthusiasm and determination to do a good job – it was the right move. Could you tell us something we might not know about you? 

I spent my formative years playing ice hockey (predominantly as a netminder) and was even (very briefly) selected as part of the British Universities National Team. If they ever finish building the new Bristol rink, I’ll no doubt be back on the ice at the first opportunity.  

Wow. Very cool. That’s always my favourite question to ask! 

One more: if you didn’t work at gcp what would your dream job have been?  

I joined gcp at the age of 36 having spent a good deal of my working life in general insurance. I’d yearned to do something more creative for a living for a long time and as I mentioned before, it was Lisa that really gave me the encouragement and belief that I could make this career a reality. Therefore, I’ve found myself in a very privileged position, doing a job that I really enjoy as well as being paid to study. I believe that as we age we inherently tend to become more insular and an unexpected side effect of my career change has been that I’m expanding my mind in ways I never really thought could.  

Of course, I would also really have liked to have been an F1 driver, pro mountain biker or NHL hockey star, who wouldn’t? 

Um, not sure I’m with you on that one. All that driving round in circles makes me dizzy! Thanks for your time today Owen. Good luck in your studies – we will catch up with your progress on the blog over the coming months. 

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Keep an eye on our blog for more staff interviews over the coming weeks, the summer is a popular time to join our team!

If you’ve been following us for a while you might also remember that September is the company’s own birthday. We have some exciting news to announce during our own anniversary month …

Owen WFH: a double edged sword

Working from home has, for me, been a double edged sword. I’m writing this with Fontaines D.C.’s “Liberty Belle” blaring in the background. What a treat! I definitely couldn’t do this in the office. That said, it’s on because I need a way to drown out the exuberant screams of my 2 and 3 year old children. At least they haven’t needed schooling over the past months.

In practical terms we’ve set up in our front room (now office), dividing the room in half by pushing the sofa 2 metres closer to the TV. This it seems, is also a better distance for viewing films of an evening. I’ve knocked up a desk out of plywood, collected my computer and chair from the office and even managed to pinch an extra chair for Lisa (my wife). The new office hierarchy is clear, I make the coffee, breakfast and lunch, draw things and generally write blog posts, Lisa does the real work.

While we are fortunate to have the space and internet connection to allow us to adapt to full time working from home pretty seamlessly, it does raise the question of how working patterns are likely to change and with that, how the design of homes and workspaces may change too. Should designers and architects be considering dedicated workspaces in all new homes? How can this be achieved given the fine margins involved? Should spaces be more multifunctional? Do people really need “spare” bedrooms?! Largely, the post war generation in Britain has long been spoiled with luxury and quality of life never before possible. Has Covid-19 rolled this back a little? Or a lot?

During lockdown I noted with amazement the wide reporting of how the natural world was flourishing as a result of a reduction in our (human) activity; I sincerely hope that this was not a temporary state of affairs. I’m confident that Covid-19 has been an “eye-opener” for many but I worry deeply that we are too quick to return to our old habits. As the saying goes, “time is a great healer”. But, time can also allow us to forget important facts and ultimately breed ignorance. Living and working in Bristol, I was among the first people to see the toppling of Edward Colston’s statue on social media, as the Black Lives Matter movement gathered pace, support and attention across the globe, in the wake of a pandemic. This is something that I find even more extraordinary than Covid-19 and that it is happening alongside the pandemic is remarkable but perhaps not unsurprising.

Perhaps we are living in extraordinary times, perhaps we’re just more aware as a species of the times we’re living in? Either way, I would implore people to remember Covid-19, support BLM (peacefully) and try to focus on the long term future of our planet.   

 

Thoughts on Lockdown: Owen

Owen takes some time to reflect on his current situation.

Having returned home from holiday on an emergency flight a couple of weeks ago and now with the whole family “confined to barracks” for the foreseeable, it’s fair to say that as we’ve had to make some significant adjustments in this unusual situation. I find a conversation via WhatsApp video with my 96 year-old grandmother is always a good way of putting things into perspective, however. She lived and worked as a nurse during the blitz in London, where she first met my grandfather – a doctor – over a patient they were attending. Her take on the current state of affairs is that not a lot has changed for her personally. She talks of how she, “is used to spending time in her own company” and that, “the only real change is that I can’t go to church”. If anything she tells me that, “she is almost having more contact with people”. With a network of friends in her neighbourhood in Boston, Lincolnshire, she assures me that she is well cared for and as she already does her shopping online, the fridge is very well stocked.

 

This got me thinking; as the first real national emergency that my generation and the generation above me has lived through, are we perhaps all being a little dramatic? I fear for wellbeing of my loved ones but we’re not literally being bombed. I’ve been woken up at all hours of the morning by our 1 and 3 year-olds but I’m not being woken up by an air raid siren. We’re running low on pasta and rice but we’re not starving. We’re stuck in but we have any number of digital means to communicate (face-to-face) with those we hold dear, all over the world. I like to think that I’m an optimist and in my opinion we can take so many positives away from this crisis: More than half a million people volunteering to help the NHS, businesses adapting their focus to produce ventilators and PPE for front line workers, neighbours generally being more neighbourly, individuals and businesses adapting to new ways of working overnight, people spending time with and appreciating their immediate family. The list could go on. While I understand that I’m in an extremely lucky position where I can work from home and get daily fresh air, I genuinely believe that we can all find our own positives and that we will be galvanised as a nation when we come out the other side of Covid-19.

 

Owen’s grandmother with his baby

Owen’s grandmother with his baby