The Standard
Creating a category-disrupting hotel in a former town hall
Creating a category-disrupting hotel in a former town hall
A first for Orms The Standard is our first hotel project. It has led to several more, and stands to demonstrate our belief that special, memorable places for living and leisure can be created out of buildings originally designed for other uses. While others bidding for the site opted for new-build schemes, our client – Crosstree – saw the potential for reuse, bringing us on board because of our success in securing planning on other complicated sites in Camden – and elsewhere in London’s West End.
Setting a Standard Our canvas was a 1970s Brutalist building on Euston Road, opposite St Pancras railway station. It was designed as an annexe to Camden Town Hall next door but had become unpopular, being seen as making a negative contribution to the conservation area to the south. Studies by Crosstree showed that a hotel would work well here, with the site’s proximity to transport links, King’s Cross and the West End.
Creative collaboration Early on, we partnered up with The Standard – a boutique hospitality brand looking to create their first hotel outside the US, and whose founder, Andre Balazs, immediately saw the building’s potential to fit into his portfolio of category-disrupting, one-of-a-kind properties. Orms became lead consultant, taking responsibility for the exterior architecture, collaborating with Shawn Hausman and Archer Humphryes on the interiors.
Rooftop extrusion To accommodate the hotel’s 266 rooms, we extended the building up by three floors. This was a structural and contextual challenge, resolved through close collaboration with engineers Heyne Tillett Steel. The façade’s existing precast concrete panels are an integral part of the structure and could not be removed without significant remodelling, so we threaded new steel columns in to take the weight of the additional floors. The concrete panels also informed the external form of the building: the new floors read as an extrusion of those below, stepping back in deference to the Grade I-listed St Pancras station opposite.
Red is the colour To signal the arrival of The Standard on Euston Road, we designed a pill-shaped shuttle lift that runs up the north elevation to the top-floor bars and restaurant, following a natural break in the massing of the building. Technically complex in its engineering, the lift is exactly the same red colour as London’s famous Routemaster buses (and The Standard branding).
Outside space Even in this busy central London location, we have carved out small areas of external space. The ground-floor bars spill out into a garden to the south of the building away from the busy road, part of which has been reinstated as a public right of way. On the eighth floor, bedrooms have private terraces with outside baths, while the ninth and tenth floor bays cantilever out to host a restaurant and bar with a roof terrace above.
Kings Cross, London
Crosstree Real Estate Partners
2017
Camden