neiheiser argyros’ london pavilion merges storage cabinet and garden canopy in one structure

Exeter Road Pavilion by Neiheiser Argyros

 

Neiheiser Argyros’ Exeter Road Pavilion is an adaptive reuse of a modest Victorian garden outbuilding in northwest London, redesigned for an art collector and amateur DJ who wanted a place equally suited to storing books, records, and artworks as to hosting garden gatherings, workouts, and the occasional ping-pong match. The brief was twofold: create an interior cabinet for storage and an exterior canopy for shelter. From the outset, the design team addressed these as a single architectural problem rather than two separate tasks. At the center of the project is a long, continuous cabinet, conceived as a contemporary cabinet of curiosities, that begins inside the refurbished outbuilding and extends outward into the garden. Within it, the client’s eclectic world finds a home: art storage, art display, shelves for books and vinyl records, a DJ booth, a television, files, and a rotating constellation of family photos and knick-knacks.

 

As the cabinet continues outdoors, it houses a ping-pong table, free weights, and garden games within the same coherent architectural framework. Although it contains diverse content, the cabinet maintains a unified presence through a perforated stainless-steel screen that fronts it along its length. This surface produces a shifting awareness of what lies behind, sometimes transparent, sometimes reflective, sometimes nearly opaque, as natural and artificial light change throughout the day. In this way, the cabinet becomes both a reveal and a conceal, linking interior and exterior through a single, continuous architectural gesture.

all images courtesy of Neiheiser Argyros

 

 

The cabinet functions as both storage and structure, containing objects within while at the same time supporting the new canopy. The architectural team at Neiheiser Argyros was interested not only in linking these elements, the cabinet and the canopy, but in introducing a productive tension between them, holding them in relation through a sense of precarious balance. The design draws from the work of Fischli & Weiss, particularly their photographic series depicting carefully poised everyday objects, caught in the fragile instant before collapse. Their sense of provisional codependence guided the design approach. To translate this into architecture, Neiheiser Argyros conceived a straightforward canopy form but traced the path of gravity through it in a non-intuitive way. By removing a column where one would normally expect support, a subtle structural precarity was introduced. The order was reinstated through a counterbalance, establishing an alternate and legible description of forces on the site.

 

The resulting composition heightens the ordinary, amplifying the banal until it becomes unexpected. In its built form, the counterweight becomes a solid mass of marble, precision-milled to nest within the web of a galvanized steel I-beam. A tension rod, expressed openly on the opposite side, ties back to a substantial block of concrete set below ground, allowing the canopy to hover with surprising lightness. The cabinet surfaces are clad in stainless steel panels that simultaneously mirror the shifting garden and reveal the collection held within. The canopy itself is a stack of marble, steel, and polycarbonate, materials raw and refined, layered clearly one atop the other. The entire assembly extends the interior outward, drawing the garden in through reflection and translucency. As daylight changes and the vegetation grows and recedes, the pavilion becomes an instrument of observation: a site where structure, storage, and landscape remain in constant, perceptible dialogue.

 

project info:

 

name: Exeter Road Pavilion
architect: Neiheiser Argyros | @neiheiser_argyros

location: London, UK

 

 

designboom has received this project from our DIY submissions feature, where we welcome our readers to submit their own work for publication. see more project submissions from our readers here.

 

edited by: christina vergopoulou | designboom

The post neiheiser argyros’ london pavilion merges storage cabinet and garden canopy in one structure appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.

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