FCBS creates Passivhaus student accommodation crescents in Cambridge
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FCBS creates Passivhaus student accommodation crescents in Cambridge

Architecture practice Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios has created a series of crescent-shaped student housing blocks with a CLT structure for King’s College at the University of Cambridge.

Called Stephen Taylor Court, the blocks contain 84 homes for King’s College’s graduate students and fellows that were designed to Passivhaus standards and to have as low a carbon impact as possible.

“Due to the considered material choice, prioritising low-embodied carbon materials, reuse of existing materials, local sourcing and targeting recycled content, and accounting for carbon sequestered in the cross-laminated timber, the project has negative embodied carbon on completion as more carbon has been sequestered in its production than emitted,” Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios partner Hugo Marrack told Dezeen.

Stephen Taylor Court by Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios
The project is made up of three crescent-shaped buildings

The architecture practice used its own carbon tool named FCBS Carbon at early design stages to help estimate and limit the whole-life carbon emissions of the scheme.

FCBS Carbon is a spreadsheet that is free to use by other architects and considers all the CO2 produced by a building, including the building material, construction and demolition.

Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios used Stephen Taylor Court as a “test case” for its tool and calculated its net carbon performance – both operational and embodied – to be less than zero for the first 10 to 15 years of the project’s life.

According to Marrack, the carbon calculations for the project did not consider furniture, fixtures and equipment (FF&E) or mechanical, electrical and plumbing (MEP).

Stephen Taylor Court by Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios
Steep-pitched roofs reference arts and crafts buildings in the area

Located within a conservation area in Cambridge, the apartments have a cross-laminated timber (CLT) structure clad in water-struck gault bricks that are similar in appearance to traditional Cambridge bricks.

The CLT structure was chosen for its lightweight property, airtightness of the structural envelope and the material’s low embodied carbon.

Stephen Taylor Court by Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios
Stephen Taylor Court has a cross-laminated timber structure clad in brick

“The lightweight CLT structure of the buildings reduces foundation loads, allowing the use of a thin reinforced concrete raft foundation ‘floating’ on rigid insulation,” explained Smith and Wallwork structural engineer Tristan Wallwork.

“This not only reduces the amount of concrete used in the substructure but also provides a perfect Passivhaus foundation solution.”

“Detailing of any inherent thermal bridges, such as facade restraint ties, is also drastically simplified due to the robust and solid CLT structural envelope – providing complete flexibility on location of any fixings required,” continued Wallwork.

Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios plans to continue to work with the college in the future to help maintain net-zero carbon beyond the first 10 to 15 years after completion, by implementing renewable energy options such as photovoltaic panels.

Stephen Taylor Court by Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios
The accommodation buildings surround a courtyard

The 4,300-square-metre scheme is located within a conservation area known for its arts and crafts houses, which influenced Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios’ design.

The housing at Stephen Taylor Court is made up of three brick crescents surrounding a garden courtyard with an adjacent red brick villa.

“The central triptych of three crescents creates an open and informal court which provides depth and breadth to views from the streetscape to the leafy context beyond,” said Hugo Marrack.

Stephen Taylor Court by Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios
A red brick villa sits at the centre of the scheme

Steep-pitched roofs, dormer windows that punctuate the roofline and oriel windows on the gable ends of the apartments reference the arts and crafts buildings in the area.

“The sympathy with the arts and crafts approach is in celebrating the joy in each of these building details and the material’s properties, rather than ironing them out, as one might with a more minimal approach,” Marrack explained.

“This being said, the results aim towards a leaner, contemporary expression of its time, rather than forms of reproduction. In some respects, the outcomes are almost brutalist,” he continued.

Stephen Taylor Court by Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios
The project is part of the college’s plan to provide sustainable living for its students

Along with the newly built housing, Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios refurbished and extended an existing Victorian-era villa on the site to accommodate a common room, library and laundry room.

Stephen Taylor Court is the second graduate accommodation at the college to be built in recent years after the development at Cramner Road by British firm Allies and Morrison, which was also built to Passivhaus standards and was longlisted in the 2021 Dezeen Awards.

The photography is by James Newton.


Project credits:

Architect: Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios
Landscape architect: Robert Myers Associates
Planning consultant: Turley
Structural engineer: Smith and Wallwork
MEP and sustainability engineer, acoustic engineer and Passivhaus consultant: Max Fordham
Principal designer, project manager and quantity surveyor: Faithful and Gould
Fire engineer: The Fire Surgery
Main contractor: Gilbert Ash

Reference