XClose

The Bartlett School of Architecture

Home
Menu

Bartlett Architecture students construct movable urban garden in King’s Cross

14 August 2015

Welcome Shelter Charles Redman

The Skip Garden, the urban garden and community space in the heart of the King’s Cross redevelopment has opened in its new home, unveiling seven new structures curated in collaboration with The Bartlett School of Architecture UCL.

The green space, which is run by Global Generation, has moved to its third and most exciting space at King’s Cross, working with undergraduate students from the School of Architecture to create bespoke structures for learning and events. Now open to the public, the collaboration aims to add to the existing garden, whilst giving undergraduates experience of project management and design as well as exposure to a real client and a real brief.


The students have embraced sustainable construction techniques through the use of reclaimed materials such as sash windows to create a greenhouse effect, railway sleepers to form toilet cubicles and coffee sacks filled with earth to create energy efficient walls. The development includes various facilities that can be used by the public such as the Skip Garden Kitchen, a dining area and multiple growing spaces incorporating into London’s first large-scale reed bed water filtration scape.

The collaboration between The Bartlett School of Architecture and Global Generation is the brainchild of Julia King and Jan Kattein who run The Bartlett’s BSc Architecture design unit, UG3.

Commenting on the collaboration, Julia King, from The Bartlett’s BSc Architecture programme, said: "Full-scale making exposes students to real world challenges. Building your own structure and then inhabiting it engages you with your work in a very visceral manner and working with Skip Garden has allowed the students to do just that. To now see the structures in the final phase is both rewarding and exciting. We hope the Skip Garden continue to work with the local community, allowing opportunities, such as this to grow."

More information:

In the Media:

Images: Welcome Shelter designed by Charles Redman (top), Glass House Lantern designed by Rachael Taylor (bottom)