10 Buildings We Love by Piers Taylor
Known for his stripped-back approach to home design, RIBA award-winning architect Piers Taylor focuses more on light and space than expensive features as he challenges mainstream architectural conventions.
British architect Piers Taylor is the founder of two architectural practices, Invisible Studio and Mitchell Taylor Workshop (now Mitchell Eley Gould) prior to that. A former design fellow at the University of Cambridge and a studio master at London's Architectural Association, Taylor has also established a number of educational programs, including the annual Studio in the Woods. On top of all that, he also appears as the co-host of the BBC Two’s The World's Most Extraordinary Homes series available on Netflix.
Taylor's projects push boundaries in terms of cost, technique, and process—but he doesn't consider his work avant-garde. "In many ways, I don’t see our work as unconventional—it does what people have done for thousands of years, in that it takes the materials, available resources, and skills from any given context and uses them to make buildings," Taylor tells us. "Often, the contexts that we work in have limited resources and few conventional building skills, so our buildings might appear to be fairly raw or frugal. It’s only in recent years that design has become synonymous with a kind of grotesque, applied luxury. We have no interest in that world of design, and our work in some ways offers an alternative, lower-impact model of architecture to many practices today."
Keep scrolling to take a look at 10 of our favorite projects by Taylor.
Taylor's own home is a renovation of an old gamekeeper's cottage four miles outside of the city of Bath, which he dramatically modernized for his family in 2008. The transformation earned him an AJ Small Project Award in 2009.
Moonshine is beautifully set in an isolated spot in the English countryside outside of Bath. The dramatic juxtaposition of a stone gamekeeper's cottage and a modern, timber-framed addition gives the home a pastoral feel while capitalizing on the dramatic view of St. Catherine's Valley.
Photo: Ben Anders
The modern timber-framed addition.
Invisible Studio
The interior of Moonshine.
Invisible Studio
Room 13
A direct response to its gritty, urban context, Room 13 in Bristol is a community art studio where resident artists work alongside excluded children. Nicholas Serota, former director of London's Tate Gallery, called this "the most important model for art education we have today." A perfect example that low-grade, everyday materials can be beautiful, the studio is heated and cooled by a ground source heat pump, and the "snouts" act as ventilation and light shafts. Room 13 won a RIBA Award in 2007 as well as a regional sustainability award.
Built out of raw concrete blocks, the building's interior is finished with bare plywood, OSB, and a varnished concrete screed.
Invisible Studio
The head of the RIBA jury panel remarked about Room 13, "It shows me that more than anything, architecture is about people."
Invisible Studio
Trailer (Equivalent #2)
Built by Invisible Studio in the woods near Bath, Trailer (Equivalent #2) is a fiberglass- and steel-clad cabin first conceived as a prototype for an economical, self-built, mobile home. The dwelling, suitable as a permanent or temporary accommodation, can be legally transported on a public highway like a trailer. A removable, wheeled "bogey" slides out from under the steel chassis when the building is not in motion. The total cost of construction was kept to £20,000 by using second-hand materials and waste from other construction sites. The aim of the project was to provide a super low-cost, versatile, usable space that could act as a kit of parts for any self-builder to improvise around or easily adapt.
The trailer is clad in corrugated fiberglass and steel, and internally lined in used, cleaned shuttering plywood.
Invisible Studio
All of the joinery is crafted from plywood offcuts, including the two staircases. Handrails are made from offcuts of blue rope, leftovers from Invisible Studio's Studio in the Woods program. Both gable ends, "glazed" with high-performance interlocking polycarbonate, afford lots of light.
Invisible Studio
Visible Studio
Built by Invisible Studio with the help of neighbors and friends—none of whom had ever constructed a building before—Visible Studio uses untreated and unseasoned timber grown in the surrounding woodland. The project was an exercise in establishing a system of building that could be constructed by unskilled labor with minimal drawings. The "mistakes" of the unskilled team remain evident in the building, with no attempt to conceal them. The total cost of the project, including materials and labor, was £15,000 (about $21,343.20).
The studio is built on two floors—there is a 592-square-foot enclosed space accessed via a bridge from the slope, which is above an open workshop.
Invisible Studio
All of the timber was milled over the two days from trees that stood on the site of the future studio—no other timber was used.
Invisible Studio
The constraints informed the building design, and were embraced—for example, the cladding that was milled at the end was only enough to partially clad the studio.
Invisible Studio
Shop the Look
Wood Architecture Now! Vol. 2
As soon as our earliest ancestors first ventured out of their caves, they turned to wood for their protective structures. The ultimate renewable resource for architecture is also our oldest, rich with the evocation of bygone harmony between human beings and their environment. For some time pushed to the wayside by steel, concrete, and glass, wood has recently experienced an exciting revival. With the help of computer-driven design and manufacturing techniques, this inaugural construction material has been rediscovered and reimagined, crafted into geometric marvels; smooth shelters; and light, airy interiors. From Snøhetta's Norwegian Wild Reindeer Pavilion, with its CNC-milled timber wall, to beautiful modern homes in Japan, from urban centers to wild and unforgiving landscapes, see how this ancient building matter has come to construct some of the most innovative and contemporary buildings of today. Text in English, French, and German. Photo Courtesy of TASCHEN Publisher: TASCHEN
ShopHerman Miller Eames Molded Plastic Armchair
Charles and Ray Eames realized their dream to create a single-shell form over 80 years ago by making their molded chairs of fiberglass. When the environmental risks of that material became known, the Eames Molded Shell Chair (1950) was changed to polypropylene, which is 100% recyclable and has a pleasant matte texture. In 2013, Herman Miller safely brought back the fiberglass shell thanks to a new proprietary production process. Today’s fiberglass chair is made of 99% recyclable materials and covered by Herman Miller’s take-back program for environmentally sound recycling. Plus, it’s true to the original with its beloved variegated surface. Also making its debut in 2013 was the stunning Eames Molded Wood Chair, a longtime dream of the Eameses finally made possible by today’s revolutionary 3-D molding technology. The result is an elegant yet strong and durable beautiful wood shell. The collection was expanded again in 2015 to include a counter stool and barstool. Each provides just the right amount of give, with a deep seat pocket and waterfall seat edge to reduce pressure on the backs of thighs. The Molded Shell Chair is a celebration of the Eameses’ fascination with emerging materials. “The chair that Charles and Ray were designing,” says grandson Eames Demetrios, “is the chair that’s made tomorrow.” This is an authentic Eames Chair by Herman Miller. Made in U.S.A.
ShopArtemide Tolomeo Mega Floor Lamp
Whether adjusting for height, length or tilt, the Artemide Tolomeo Mega Floor Lamp does it all. Designed by Michele De Lucchi and Giancarlo Fassina, this floor lamp features an extruded and anodized aluminum articulated arm structure in a brilliantly polished finish. Offered with a Pale Grey Satin with Polycarbonate Fiber or Parchment shade.
ShopVisible Studio is heated by waste wood from the woodland, and water from the roof feeds into an attenuation pond that forms a natural habitat.
Invisible Studio
Longdrop
A no-impact, composting toilet made by Invisible Studio to serve the Visible Studio, Longdrop was designed and made entirely from scavenged material left over from other projects, cost nothing to build, and boasts a modern profile. Longdrop was shortlisted for the AJ Small Projects Award.
The studwork, battens, and sheet material of Longdrop were all of varying sizes and left over from other projects.
Invisible Studio
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Invisible Studio
Waste materials are separated just below the seat. The urine is captured at ground level via a drainpipe, to be used as fertilizer, as it contains nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium. The solids are captured via a series of stacked, donated wheelie bins, and will be used as fertilizer once left for 12 months.
Invisible Studio
Starfall Farm
The renovations for this farmhouse in St. Catherine's Valley, Gloucestershire, used materials from demolished barns, with cladding designed to conceal the proportions of an existing extension and reveal key views into the landscape.
Starfall has a very simple asymmetric section that allows the morning light to penetrate deep into the building and flood it with light.
Invisible Studio
According to Invisible Studio, "The project was also a way of reconciling all the thermal deficiencies of Moonshine, which is far too lightweight. Starfall is ruthlessly thermally massive, and with it incredibly efficient."
Invisible Studio
The minimalist interiors are well-lit and showcase a simple material palette.
Invisible Studio
Folded Studio
This "overspill" studio in Essex accommodates a home office and a potting room and was designed with a continuous, clerestory window that wraps around its upper portion. The "folded" roof allows daylight to continuously penetrate into the space.
The studio was constructed with low-cost materials, such as profiled bitumen sheet for the roof, polycarbonate for the clerestory, and spruce ply linings.
Invisible Studio
The "folded roof" is also designed to collect rainwater, which is harvested for the adjacent vegetable garden.
Invisible Studio
Caretaker’s House
For the Caretaker’s House at Hooke Park, Invisible Studio was commissioned by the Architectural Association to develop a student schematic design into a low-cost timber prototype, using only timber that had been grown and felled on-site and in its green state.
Careful to preserve the intent of the student design, the building uses unseasoned larch, cedar, poplar, Douglas fir, and spruce as appropriate. Wood is also used for heating and insulation.
Valerie Bennett
As far as Invisible Studio is aware, the Caretaker's House is the world’s first green timber building insulated to Passive House standards, and with Passive House airtightness.
Valerie Bennett
The construction process was super-efficient; even the joinery was manufactured on site. The kitchen (which uses exposed copper piping for taps) has chunky timber worktops, and the stairs use an innovative, dry-jointed system that gains strength as the timber dries. The handrail is made of mild steel bent piping, which was also welded on site.
Valerie Bennett
Westonbirt Mess Building
For the Westonbirt National Arboretum Tree Management Center in Gloucestershire, Invisible Studio designed a series of buildings that used timber intelligently and could act as prototypes for rural buildings elsewhere. Their work consists of a large span workshop building, a new mess and educational facility, and a yard for the tree team. The mess building was the second one they constructed, and it was made entirely using Westonbirt’s own timber, which was grown and milled on-site with minimal processing. The building was constructed by skilled timber framers Nick Perchard and James Symon, who worked with unskilled volunteers throughout the project. It received a National RIBA Award in addition to three Regional RIBA Awards.
The engineering was deceptively complex, as the scale of the main timber structure is possibly the biggest ever in UK construction.
Invisible Studio
The structure appears to glow from within at night.
Invisible Studio
Westonbirt Machinery Store
Another structure from Westonbirt that takes full advantage of the site's available timber, the award-winning machinery store offers a big-span timber alternative to the steel- or concrete-framed, "at-cost" rural barns. The big-span workshop uses 65.6-foot-long Corsican pine in continuous lengths that were then hewn by hand into structural sections.
The building was constructed entirely from green timber grown and milled on-site at Westonbirt, with a series of interns and apprentices from the Carpenter’s Fellowship. The students gained valuable experience through the process of working alongside master carpenters.
Invisible Studio
The project built upon design processes and construction methods that have evolved through the construction of the Caretaker's House and Visible Studio.
Invisible Studio
Starfall Farm and Room 13 were designed while Piers Taylor was a director of Mitchell Taylor Workshop prior to founding Invisible Studio.
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