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Architecture

Case: Dujardin Mews

updated
February 22, 2021
Published on:
September 26, 2017
January 5, 2021

Case: Dujardin Mews

Dujardin Mews2
(Above: The award-winning Dujardin Mews social housing scheme. Image: © Mark Hadden)

Dujardin Mews is the first council-led, social housing delivered by the local borough of Enfield in 40 years.

Designed by Karakusevic Carson with Maccreanor Lavington, the project has won a RIBA London Award 2017 and RIBA London Client of the Year 2017 - Sponsored by Tobermore and a RIBA National Award 2017.

Forming the first phase of the wider regeneration of Ponders End, it provides replacement homes for residents of the nearby Alma Estate.

The project achieves its ambition to maximize the site while respecting the local townscape and delivers high quality, exemplar housing for Enfield and the local community.

The housing is laid out as a new street, connecting existing pedestrian flows and paving the way for new connections. The slim site provoked the rotation of houses on one side of the street so that they are wide and shallow. This has produced an interesting house type which benefits the street by providing variation and a new rhythm.

Dujardin Mews 1
(RIBA judges praised the ordered street and clever planning. Image: © Mark Hadden)

Externally, high-quality brick, carefully considered elevations and clever planning for bikes and bins, makes for an ordered street with a sense of home. Inside, the apartments and houses are generous and well planned, with each room just the size it needs to be for its use.

Enfield played a critical role as client in the success of the project. Its willingness to invest in quality, its openness to the design team’s expertise and communication with the local community and prospective tenants have been praised.

On the project, the contractor was Durkan and the structural engineers were Peter Brett Associates. The M&E engineers were Designbrook, the landscape architects were East and the environmental consultant was NRG Consulting

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