Hartley's Jam Factory

27 Green Walk, London SE1 4TQ, UK, United Kingdom


Former Use: Jam Factory
New Use: Apartments, flexible live/work units and space for leisure or commercial uses
Category: Commerce/retail, Recreation, Residential
Reuse Architect: Simpsonhaugh architects
Construction year(s): 1902 -
Reuse year(s): 1999 - 2003

Description:

Sir William Pickles Hartley incorporated his jam-making business in 1884 and established a manufacturing base on Rothsay Street in Bermondsey in 1902. When production at the factory ended, the future of this fragment of London’s architectural and industrial history was threatened.
To conserve the factory building, it was converted into a mix of uses to serve a new community.

The result is an attractive new address that combines the best in contemporary high-density living with the heritage values of its site. The existing buildings were sensitively adapted to provide generous apartments, flexible live/work units and space for leisure or commercial uses. The most significant contemporary intervention is the addition of lightweight glazed penthouses that are set-back from the existing façade at high-level. Balconies which face each other across internal courtyards were also added.(1)

Relevant Literature:

  1. https://simpsonhaugh.com/projects/jam-factory
  2. http://www.exploringsouthwark.co.uk/hartleys-jam-factory/4590035602

Added on 2018-08-09 by editor Dora Chatzi Rodopoulou