Chapter 2 of 24
Bathroom Tower
Well, the first slide shows you, on the left, the first project that I started with, which was a service tower for eight students' hostel in Paddington, London, which set out to provide all the bathroom accommodation for a row of Victorian houses which we were converting. The houses hold two hundred students, and the one thing they were missing - apart from being in very bad structural repair - was any degree of servicing at all. My idea was to build this tower behind the buildings in the old back yards of the Victorian houses, which would provide all the bathroom accommodation. The tower is arranged around a mast, like a tower crane, and onto this mast are fitted whole fibreglass bathrooms which were delivered to the site in one piece. The bathrooms are accessed by a helical ramp which goes round the outside of them and connects back to the building at every floor. The idea of having this helix was that a student could enter the bathroom tower from any floor in the building and carry on going round the ramp until he found a bathroom which was free. This gave a much better distribution of bathrooms at peak hours, morning and evening.
As far as the actual construction is concerned, this was very much a learning experience for me. I dealt directly with the fibreglass firm, the steel company, and all the other sub-contractors supplying components for this tower; and I co-ordinated the construction programme, since we had an Irish builder who had never seen anything like this before in his life. In fact, you can see me in that left hand slide staring anxiously at the first ramps being swung into position.
The big experience that this really gave me was an understanding of the nuts and bolts of dry construction architecture and I think the building very much got me into the whole idea of constructing flexible industrial buildings in the future.