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Design for a loft flat

Drawing
20/10/1994 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This drawing by the British architects Brookes Stacey Randall comes from a 1994 scheme to convert a disused loft space into a flat for a celebrity client. Lofts were originally designed for industrial storage and they may be thought of as large empty boxes. As such, they are ideal shells for the open-plan, double-height spaces that are popular with flat-dwellers today. In this project the spatial possibilities were matched by a generous budget and the architects were able to produce some unusual one-off designs. This drawing shows a glass bridge that spans a central living area, linking the upper floor to a roof terrace. The curved roof light opens to allow access onto the terrace. The drawing consists of two sheets held together with adhesive tape. The top sheet is a tracing based on the computer-generated image beneath. Computer-Aided Design (CAD) is thought to give much cleaner results than the ink pens, drawing boards and set squares used traditionally by architects. Here the two combine: the freehand tracing serves as a quick reworking of the earlier CAD design.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Parts
This object consists of 2 parts.

  • Drawing
  • Drawing
TitleDesign for a loft flat (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Brief description
Design drawing for a flat in a loft conversion for Chris Lowe by Brookes Stacey Randall, 1994
Physical description
Drawing comprised of two sheets held together with adhesive tape. The top drawing is hand drawn in fibre tipped pen on tracing paper. The bottom sheet is a CAD print, cut down from a larger drawing, with correction fluid and sketches in red and blue coloured pencil. Both sheets have four punched holes along the left edge.
Association
Summary
This drawing by the British architects Brookes Stacey Randall comes from a 1994 scheme to convert a disused loft space into a flat for a celebrity client. Lofts were originally designed for industrial storage and they may be thought of as large empty boxes. As such, they are ideal shells for the open-plan, double-height spaces that are popular with flat-dwellers today. In this project the spatial possibilities were matched by a generous budget and the architects were able to produce some unusual one-off designs. This drawing shows a glass bridge that spans a central living area, linking the upper floor to a roof terrace. The curved roof light opens to allow access onto the terrace. The drawing consists of two sheets held together with adhesive tape. The top sheet is a tracing based on the computer-generated image beneath. Computer-Aided Design (CAD) is thought to give much cleaner results than the ink pens, drawing boards and set squares used traditionally by architects. Here the two combine: the freehand tracing serves as a quick reworking of the earlier CAD design.
Collection
Accession number
E.1612:1, 2-2000

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Record createdDecember 20, 2003
Record URL
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