Dulwich College by alma-nac: a new lower school library and the refurbishment of its emblematic Charles Barry block

dulwich

Designed to LETI Net Zero Carbon standards, the Raymond Chandler Library is refining its energy performance after a year in use, while the team also restores the school’s central Charles Barry building, Sarah Simpkin reports

The cultural significance of a new building at an eminent independent school is not what it was 150 years ago. On 21 June 1870, the future King Edward (then Prince of Wales) travelled six miles into south London to open Dulwich College’s new building by Charles Barry Jr. “A fair candidate for the wildest 19th-century building in the whole of London”, as Ian Nairn later put it, with a mishmash of styles “thrown at each other with a kind of nihilistic joy”.

From this cornerstone came a succession of buildings, each reflecting the preoccupations of their day, as the college expanded through contemporary architectural patronage: in 1934, a cricket pavilion by Danby Smith, unveiled by a former England cricketer; in 1969, the great brutalist Christison Hall dining room by Manfred Bresgens and Malcolm Pringle of Austin Vernon & Partners (the practice behind of much of the Dulwich Estate’s mid-century housing), opened by Prince Philip; in 2016, a Grimshaw science block with the James Caird, Sir Ernest Shackleton’s lifeboat, moored in its atrium.

There have been smaller, less trumpeted infill projects on the grade II-listed campus too, but the most significant development in recent years has been the £5.5m Raymond Chandler Library. The building, completed last year and opened in the Michaelmas term of 2024, now provides a full year of in-use energy performance to analyse. Designed to meet LETI net zero carbon standards, it achieved its embodied carbon target and is now being optimised to close a small operational energy gap

 

Already registered? Login here

To continue enjoying Building.co.uk, sign up for free guest access

Existing subscriber? LOGIN

 

Stay at the forefront of thought leadership with news and analysis from award-winning journalists. Enjoy company features, CEO interviews, architectural reviews, technical project know-how and the latest innovations.

  • Limited access to building.co.uk
  • Breaking industry news as it happens
  • Breaking, daily and weekly e-newsletters

Get your free guest access  SIGN UP TODAY

Gated access promo

Subscribe now for unlimited access

 

Subscribe to Building today and you will benefit from:

  • Unlimited access to all stories including expert analysis and comment from industry leaders
  • Our league tables, cost models and economics data
  • Our online archive of over 10,000 articles
  • Building magazine digital editions
  • Building magazine print editions
  • Printed/digital supplements

Subscribe now for unlimited access.

View our subscription options and join our community