Approval is practice’s third in recent weeks

Piercy hotel 1

The hotel will feature rooms just 2.1m wide

皮尔斯公司已经获准在卡姆登开一家“微型房间”酒店。

The seven-storey building on a prominent corner plot opposite Chalk Farm tube station is the practice’s third approval in recent weeks followingtwo wins in Fitzrovia for a pair of mixed-use blocks.

Its latest win, for developer Henigman, will contain 59 rooms with a typical size of just 2.1m wide and 4.5m deep, which Piercy & Co said are intended for “single occupancy and short stays”.

Piercy hotel 2

The scheme is the third green light Piercy & Co has secured in recent weeks

这座2万平方英尺的建筑被称为Roundhouse酒店,将成为附近Roundhouse音乐厅的官方过夜场所。

It will require the demolition of an existing 1980s replica of a 19th-century building on the site which once housed the Adelaide Tavern.

皮尔斯公司表示,虽然现有建筑的条件“很好”,但它没有显著的历史价值,“建筑价值非常差”。

It added that the new scheme has been designed with a “deep understanding of Camden and its historic and present day architectural character.”

Piercy hotel 3

The hotel will require the demolition of an 1980s building on the site which was a replica of a previous 19th-century building

The building will feature a brick facade that grades from darker bricks at the base to lighter ones near the top, which the practice said was a nod to Camden’s “flamboyant” corner buildings.

It will also be one of a growing number of London buildings featuring tall round-arched windows.

Last week, Make secured planning for amajor office block on Piccadillywhich included the fashionable design feature.

Piercy hotel 4

The proposal will feature a brick facade grading from darker colours at the base to lighter towards the top

DSDHA also employed the approach for its controversial proposals toreplace five 1950s blocks of flats in Belgravia with an 11-storey residential scheme, which was approved in June, whileAlison Brooksis using them at her under-construction flats in King’s Cross.

And arched windows are also a feature of Piercy’s proposals to replace a four-storey art deco block in South Kensington with a six-storey block.

The plans, which have causeduproar among local campaigners, were dubbed “pretty hideous”by Stirling Prize judge and former National Gallery, National Portrait Gallery and Royal Academy boss Charles Saumarez Smith.