Bombay Sapphire commissioned Heatherwick Studio to design a distillery in England’s Hampshire. The gin maker had acquired a water-powered paper mill that had once produced bank notes for the then-British Empire. The site had over forty derelict buildings, including the main mill building, the owner’s residence, and the workers’ cottages.
The design team also had to appreciate the River Test, which flows through the site in a narrow concrete channel. Over the years, the river had been covered as the site mushroomed with buildings, and its regeneration was a key component of Heatherwick’s redevelopment scheme.
The master plan that was eventually developed addressed the design problem from two fronts. First, the River Test was selected as the datum by which everything would be organized. To make it visible, the river was widened to over twice its original size, and its banks were reshaped into green-planted foreshores.
Secondly, given the site’s deep historical significance, it became apparent that the project would take an adaptive reuse stance. However, a courtyard was introduced to bring order to the old buildings’ layout. Working closely with two government agencies, English Heritage and English Nature, Heatherwick Studio restored 23 existing historical buildings while removing 9 of the recent industrial buildings.
When deciding on the buildings to bring down, the surrounding lush English countryside was considered so that opportunities for views from the development were rightfully exploited. To retain the site’s evolution, whenever a ‘newer’ industrial building connected to an older brick one was brought down, its etched mark was left on the retained building.
At the project’s onset, the client’s brief called for the design of a visitor center within the facility. However, when the design team was taken through Bombay Sapphire’s unique distillation process, it became apparent that an alienated space for visitors would do an injustice to the rich gin making experience. The distillery uses a 1761 recipe to infuse the vapors of ten tropical and Mediterranean herbs and spices.
This train of thought, one that desired to bring the visitor to where the magic happened, led to the development of what is deemed the highlight of the project – two intertwining botanical glasshouses. These complex forms separately house the tropical and Mediterranean plants that are used in the gin making process.
Coincidentally, during the design development of the glasshouses, it was learned that the distillation process produces excess heat that could be harnessed to create a tropical and Mediterranean ambiance for the growth of herbs and spices. Instead of planting the 10 species in isolation, the studio collaborated with horticulture experts to recreate their natural ecosystems by planting over 100 additional plants.
The glasshouses were aptly placed on the widened banks of the River Test, meaning that the plants could directly tap from the flowing water source. The complex geometries of the glasshouses were achieved by 893 bespoke curved glass components held together by over 1.25 km of bronze-finished stainless steel framing.
In the Bombay Sapphire Distillery, Heatherwick Studio offers useful lessons on how to approach the adaptive reuse of buildings. There is a deliberate attempt to bring coherence amidst the chaos of a well-developed brownfield site while staying true to salient sustainable principles. Visitors can now appreciate a widened river as they walk up towards the main production facility.
By restoring key historical buildings and imbibing life to the River Test by allowing it to take center stage and creating iconic glasshouses, the project successfully juxtaposes Laverstoke’s history with its future. Opening up in the autumn of 2014, the distillery has garnered critical acclaim and clinched an ‘outstanding’ BREEAM rating, making it the first distillery and adaptive reuse project to receive such a rating.
Project Information
Architect: Heatherwick Studio
Location: Laverstoke, Whitchurch, Hampshire, United Kingdom
Client: Bombay Spirits Company Ltd.
Project Leads: Katerina Dionysopoulou, Eliot Postma
Team: Laurence Dudeney, Etain Ho, Le Ha Hoang, Alexander Jackson, Ville Saarikoski, Alma Wang
Makers: Einar Blixhavn, Hayley Henry, Hannah Parker
Area: 4 500 sqm
Status: Completed, 2014
Photographs: Hufton + Crow, Heatherwick Studio