Henley Halebrown

The Laszlo

The Laszlo
© Nick Kane

THE LASZLO

Henley Halebrown Architects

MANUFACTURERS
Allgood, Encapsulite, Forticrete, Forza Doors, Mhb, Rockwool, Cpi Euromix, Cre8, Hag, Naylor, Troldtedkt

YEAR
2022

LOCATION
London , United Kingdom

CATEGORY
Office Buildings

Text description provided by architect.

The Laszlo is on a largely residential street in a conservation area close to Highgate in North London, and a neighbor to the University of Arts, London.

The Laszlo
© Nick Kane
The Laszlo
© Nick Kane

The 5-story building dates from c. 1900. Originally the Batavia Mills, it was used for manufacturing and printing.

During World War II gas masks were stored in the building. The facades are brick, with pronounced piers and arched set-back window openings layered to create a facade with depth and shadow. Inside the structural frame is steel.

The Laszlo
© David Grandorge
The Laszlo
© Nick Kane

Most of it is encased in elephantine concrete columns and beams but on some floors, the steel structure is exposed.

When it was last refurbished 30 years ago – ostensibly for the storage of wholesale goods - a story was added and the east gable rebuilt with a new entrance, and behind it a new staircase and lift. By the time we first visited the building in 2016, the floors were partitioned and occupied in a very ad-hoc manner concealing the building’s original proportions.

The Laszlo
© Nick Kane
The Laszlo
© Nick Kane

For decades the construction of an office building has been staged into a “shell and core” and subsequent “fit out”. This reflects the speculative aspect of an office building where a shell is a form of infrastructure and the fit-out is designed for the occupation of the tenant.

As a result, the interior, designed to the particular requirements of that tenant, becomes disposable. The specificity of the office interior, the degree to which it is branded, furnished, and dressed, much like a hotel might be, has intensified as the product nature of the office has become more pronounced.

The Laszlo
© Nick Kane
The Laszlo
© Nick Kane

In this context, we sought to illustrate how elementary the construction of an office might be, by exposing the 100-year-old fabric and making adjustments to it with low-tech building techniques and materials. This approach is complemented by elements that draw on a number of art references.

A simple steel-glazed screen beneath a new concrete beam forms the new entrance. Inside, blockwork walls shape a group of interconnected rooms – hall, lift lobby, reception, and “living room”. Generally, the original structure is exposed. Some spaces have wood wool ceilings and intentionally sculptural lengths of variously shaped ductwork belying their function.

The Laszlo
© Nick Kane
The Laszlo
© David Grandorge

The same blockwork has been used to enclose the lifts, staircases, and toilets. In every instance, the blockwork is precisely detailed and carefully laid bringing a real sense of craft. Throughout the doors take their cue from Josef Albers’ color studies, their frames superimposed like a canvas hung on a wall.

On each floor, the color studies are brought together to create a gallery of doors. This room, the hall to the toilets, has an illuminated inlaid ceiling reminiscent of the mid-twentieth century north American office interior.

The Laszlo
© David Grandorge
The Laszlo
© David Grandorge

A painting by Lazlo Moholy Nagy became the inspiration for the repairs we made to the concrete floors – inlaying earth-colored screed where partitions previously cut into the floor had been removed. On the top floor, the new work also exposes the 1980s steel and timber joisted roof.

Furniture is imagined and made one of two ways but in both cases in dialogue with the original building: the reception desk and a bookshelf are elements of structure re-imagined as pieces of furniture ’structure as furniture, whilst the dresser by the kitchen island is a piece of furniture composed in the image of the structure, in other words ’furniture as structure’.

The Laszlo
© David Grandorge
The Laszlo
© Nick Kane

Throughout exposed steel beams and cable trays traversing the space distributing services, are colored ivory and light grey, again pigment contributing to a painterly interior on which daylight and artificial light fall, and shadows are cast.

The new walls are a warm light grey, and the mortar is similar in color and flush with the surface of the blocks. Around the lifts, the blocks are laid on their side for extra strength and the toothed stretcher bonds into the adjacent narrower wall.

The Laszlo
© David Grandorge
The Laszlo
© Nick Kane

Where the new walls meet an obstacle, for example, a beam, thin tiles of concrete block are stacked each on a bed of mortar.

Unlike the conventions of “shell and core” and “fit out”, the work focuses on the careful detailing of standard materials and continuity of thought between the largest elements of structure and finest tactile details.

Materials - concrete, mortar, screed, timber, and the pigment on the doors – make for a painterly and sustainable architecture and a challenge to fast fashion and ephemerality. The notion of an interior that has architectural integrity and purpose beyond the surface is important.

The Laszlo
© Nick Kane


The Laszlo
Plan - Ground floor
The Laszlo
Plan - Ground floor
The Laszlo
Plan
The Laszlo
Plan
The Laszlo
Plan - Proposed ground floor
The Laszlo
Plan - Proposed first floor
The Laszlo
Plan - Proposed second floor
The Laszlo
Plan - Proposed third floor


The Laszlo
Section - Proposed AA
The Laszlo
Section - Proposed BB


The Laszlo
Diagram
The Laszlo
Diagram
The Laszlo
Diagram
The Laszlo
Diagram
The Laszlo
Diagram - Ground floor
The Laszlo
Diagram


The Laszlo
The Laszlo
The Laszlo
The Laszlo


The Laszlo
Elevation - Proposed North east
The Laszlo
Elevation - Proposed North west
The Laszlo
Elevation - Proposed South East
The Laszlo
Plan - Site

Henley Halebrown
T +44 207 0339700
Henley Halebrown
21, Perseverance Works, 38 Kingsland Rd, London E2 8DD, United Kingdom