Jamie Fobert Architects
  • Work
  • Journal
  • Information
  • Search
  • All (505)
  • News (169)
  • Lectures (26)
  • Exhibitions (14)
  • Press (38)
  • Extras (15)
  • Awards (30)
  • On Site (40)
  • Twitter (192)
  • Instagram (129)
  • Date
  • Oldest first
On site in Trinidad
23rd Oct 2014

Our new house in Trinidad is starting to take shape. This square-set form will be clad in Travertine marble and sit in a jungle-like garden.

ShareFacebook
Twitter
Rue des Archives, Paris
2nd Dec 2014

Our new façades on Rue des Archives in Paris have just been revealed.

This is the first built work in our phased project for BHV, which restores and revives an  historic area of Paris.

ShareFacebook
Twitter
On site at Tate St Ives
13th Jan 2015

Works are progressing on site at Tate St Ives. The enabling works contract, excavating for the new galleries, is now nearing completion.

This aerial photograph was taken by a drone sent up by Tate’s film crew in December.

ShareFacebook
Twitter
Kettle’s Yard: Meet the Architect
15th Sep 2015

Kettle’s Yard house and gallery is currently closed during the construction of our new extension. In the meantime, Kettle’s Yard is working with a number of partner galleries, including the Fitzwilliam Museum and the Jerwood Gallery, to present works from their permanent collection in new contexts.

A recent news piece on their website, ‘Meet the Architect‘, introduces Jamie to friends of Kettle’s Yard  to keep them closely in touch with our exciting project as it is being built.

ShareFacebook
Twitter
On site at Tate St Ives
29th Sep 2015

Building works are progressing at Tate St Ives. The new gallery is now visibly starting to take shape. Here you can recognise the gallery door and the great ceiling height.

Tate St Ives is now closed for the winter and spring months while demolition and construction takes place. The project is due to be completed in spring 2017.

ShareFacebook
Twitter
Archaeology at Kettle’s Yard
30th Nov 2015

During building works for the extension to Kettle’s Yard, excavation in the courtyard in front of the house and gallery has revealed two deep Roman wells and a wall. Findings include decorative plasterwork, tiles and two fragmented pots. These fascinating discoveries are significant for the historic picture of the area but shall not effect the progress of the building work. Andrew Nairne, Director, says: “We’ve always known that this area was historically significant and we’re very excited to discover the Roman origins of the site.”

ShareFacebook
Twitter
On site in Trinidad
2nd Dec 2015

Our house in Trinidad is taking shape beautifully. The windows have just been installed. Next, the concrete floors and stairs will be poured and the Travertine will be arriving for the external cladding.

ShareFacebook
Twitter
A visit to St Ives
14th Dec 2015

This weekend, the entire JFA team travelled to St Ives in Cornwall to see our new gallery for Tate in construction. We visited the windswept site, overlooking beautiful Porthmeor Beach.

We were able to walk around the new gallery, still open to the sky, its 6.5m-high walls constructed using local concrete.

ShareFacebook
Twitter
On site at Tate St Ives
15th Mar 2016

At Tate St Ives, the exposed roof of the new gallery is currently being built. Here, you can see the struck beams and formwork in preparation for the concrete pour.

Once built, the roof will become a continuation of the landscape of the Cornish coast. We have introduced a series of public, landscaped spaces, with a gentle set of stairs weaving between the elevated volumes of the light chambers, meeting an existing path which leads to the sea.

ShareFacebook
Twitter
On site at Tate St Ives
13th Apr 2016

Spring sunshine streams through the newly-poured concrete roof beams which span the 16.5m width of the new gallery at Tate St Ives.

Our proposal for these beams was developed from the fishing lofts adopted by the St Ives artists in the 1940s, which were rough constructions in stone with exposed timber joists for their ceilings.  Above the concrete beams will sit six large light chambers diffusing the beautiful light of St Ives which drew so many artists here a century ago.

ShareFacebook
Twitter
On site at Tate St Ives
17th May 2016

The light chambers on the roof of our new gallery for Tate St Ives are now being poured – captured here by the Clerk of Works, as the sea mists roll in!

ShareFacebook
Twitter
On site in Trinidad
15th Jun 2016

Our house in Trinidad is almost complete.

The crisp, square-set form is now clad in beautiful Travertine. The contrasting lush, tropical garden, designed by Todd Longstaffe-Gowan, is being planted and the form of the “jungle lagoon” swimming pool can be seen here in construction in the foreground.

ShareFacebook
Twitter
On site at Charleston
23rd Sep 2016

It is an exciting point in time for our project at Charleston in East Sussex, once the home and country meeting place of the Bloomsbury Group. The groundworks are now underway at the farmyard site and CFA piling has commenced.

Designed as part of the Centenary Project that aims to safeguard Charleston’s heritage, our proposal will provide a new gallery, collection store and improved visitor facilities.

ShareFacebook
Twitter
On site at Tate St Ives
29th Sep 2016

Meanwhile, in St Ives, there’s now a freshly screeded concrete floor in our main gallery space. When the rooflights are fully installed, beautiful Cornish sunlight will fill this 500m2, column-free volume.

Outside, the windows have been installed and the contractors are beginning the installation of the external cladding.

ShareFacebook
Twitter
T Fondaco dei Tedeschi is complete!
5th Oct 2016

Over the past three years, we have been working to create the interiors and furnishings for a new department store for client DFS inside the Fondaco dei Tedeschi, an extraordinary, historic building beside the Rialto Bridge in Venice. The project is now complete and on 1 October the store opened its doors to the public for the first time.

Our vision was to create a wonderful journey through the majestic rooms of the Fondaco, with each level presenting new forms, geometries and materials. The inserted new works respond not only to the products on display but also to Venetian crafts, the historicism of the Fondaco building, and the city of Venice itself. We sought to create a “conversation” between old and new.

Photography: Matteo De Fina.

ShareFacebook
Twitter
On site at Tate St Ives
8th Nov 2016

This panoramic view of construction in progress at Tate St Ives today shows the amazing context of the site. The beautiful coastal landscape makes for a very striking backdrop to the work but also brings its own challenges, since the sea brings unpredictable and strong winds and rain.

ShareFacebook
Twitter
On site in Port-of-Spain
24th Jan 2017

Todd Logstaffe-Gowan, the landscape designer for our house in Trinidad, has shared some photographs of the site today. We are delighted to see the garden and its lagoon looking so lush and welcoming. The travertine-clad house is almost complete.

ShareFacebook
Twitter
On site at Tate St Ives
27th Jan 2017

The ceramic tiles have arrived at Tate St Ives, for the cladding of our rooftop pavilion. The tiles have been designed to echo the hues of the sea and the sky and to reference the local tradition of ceramic artists such as Bernard Leach.

ShareFacebook
Twitter
An Evening With… Luker House
1st Feb 2017

On 15th February, Jamie will be giving a special one-off tour of Luker House for a limited number of guests. Services Engineer, Henry Luker, and his wife Andrea commissioned this generously-sized family home in the village of Barnes in South West London. Luker House won an RIBA Award in 2014 and was shortlisted for the RIBA Manser Medal for best house.

Tickets are available through Open City and this event supports their pioneering education programmes.

Wednesday 15th February

18:30 – 19:30 or/
19:45 – 20:45

Luker House, London SW13

ShareFacebook
Twitter
‘Behind the hoardings’ at the Charleston Festival
9th Feb 2017

Looking ahead to May, Jamie will be giving a site tour at Charleston as part of the annual Charleston Festival.

The Centenary Project is the most ambitious building project ever undertaken by the Charleston Trust. It will see the building of a new exhibition gallery, collection store, research studio and education studio as well as the restoration of the existing Grade 2 listed barns.

Jamie will lead the tour with the on-site project manager Terry Reeves and Charleston’s Director Alistair Burtenshaw.

Friday 26th May

10:30am

Charleston, Firle, Lewes, East Sussex, BN8 6LL

ShareFacebook
Twitter
Newer posts