News

Work Commences on Grade II Listed Woolwich Old Town Hall Retrofit

Gort Scott is delighted to announce that work is starting on site at Woolwich Old Town Hall, where the practice is retrofitting this Grade II listed building to create a new arts hub in the heart of Woolwich town centre. Dating from the 1840s, the building is the oldest surviving municipal building in Woolwich and forms part of a historic quarter of civic buildings.

Over the years, numerous development phases and ad-hoc alterations have resulted in multiple entry points, level changes and internal partitioning, making the building difficult to navigate and detracting from its historic significance. Through a series of sensitive insertions and alterations, Gort Scott’s design improves access, reveals the historic stair, restores the building’s relationship to the street, and transforms the rear yard into a landscaped shared courtyard for public events and everyday use.

Gort Scott was appointed following an invited competition in 2022 as architects, conservation architects and lead consultants. Working with the Royal Borough of Greenwich and Second Floor Studios & Arts, the practice will deliver 21 genuinely affordable spaces for artists, makers and designers in Woolwich and Greenwich. The workspaces will include dedicated wash-up areas for wet art materials, secure bike storage and accessible WC facilities. A building at the rear of the Old Library will be converted into new artists’ studios which can be used as a gallery space during open studios events.

Gort Scott Appointed to Lead Abbey Wood Urban Regeneration Framework

Gort Scott is pleased to have been appointed by the Royal Borough of Greenwich and the London Borough of Bexley to lead the preparation of a new Urban Regeneration Framework for Abbey Wood.

Working with a multidisciplinary team including Something Collective, Cushman & Wakefield, Newmark, Periscope and Mott MacDonald, Gort Scott will help shape a long-term vision for Abbey Wood that identifies key opportunities, supports local ambitions, and provides a co-ordinated framework for development, public realm improvements and investment.

Abbey Wood is a place of significant opportunity, with the potential to build on its growing connectivity, rich local character and neighbourhood assets. The Framework will provide a strategic and deliverable plan for how the area can evolve over time, supporting inclusive growth, healthier streets and spaces, and a more sustainable future.

This work builds on Gort Scott’s ongoing relationship with Royal Borough of Greenwich. The practice recently completed work on Royal Arsenal Gatehouse and will shortly be starting on site at Woolwich Old Town Hall.

Andrew Tam joins Michelmersh to discuss sustainability on Forming the Future

This month, Andrew Tam, Associate at Gort Scott, joined Sarah Le Gresley and Emily Herbert on Michelmersh’s Forming the Future podcast to discuss the intersection of architecture and climate change.

The conversation explored the environmental impact of design decisions, the challenge of collecting robust data for whole life carbon assessment, and why sustainability must be embedded from the outset. It also touched on future homes standards, circularity, retrofit, biodiversity, and the behavioural changes needed to reduce carbon across the built environment.

Thank you to the Michelmersh team for the invitation and for creating space for such an important discussion on how we can help form a better future.

Visit Michelmersh.co.uk to listen to the podcast.

B Corp Month: introducing our Social Value Strategy

Maximising the benefit to local communities has always been central to how we design and deliver our projects.

Our Social Value Strategy sets out how we embed this thinking into our practice — not as a compliance exercise, but as a genuine expression of how we work. It is both a practical guide for project teams and a shared statement of intent: a commitment to ensuring that every project creates meaningful, lasting benefit for people and communities.

The strategy standardises our approach across the practice, creates a baseline against which all projects can be assessed, and ensures it is applicable to every project, regardless of scale.

We are interested in asking how we can do more. One key action lies in asking better questions earlier, listening carefully, and measuring what matters. Social value is not simply an ‘add-on’ at the end of a project — it is part of how we think and what we choose to take on.

The strategy also outlines how we track progress and remain accountable, for example through Impact Reviews, which provide a structured forum to identify risks and issues relating to impacts on people and planet, while exploring opportunities to maximise social value. It also includes post-occupancy evaluation and costing social value activities as a practice investment.

Launching this strategy during B Corp Month reflects the connection between our values and our actions, and our commitment to continually improving the positive impact of our practice.
 

Sela-Jaymes Taylor is appointed to the Oxford Design Review Panel

Sela-Jaymes Taylor has been appointed to the Oxford Design Review Panel, an independent body that provides expert design advice to support high quality development across the city. As part of the panel, she will contribute her expertise during the pre-application review process, helping to guide projects within Oxford’s sensitive and historic urban context.

Sela is an experienced Specialist Conservation Architect whose work spans complex regeneration, housing and community focused projects. She brings a strong commitment to design excellence, sustainability and placemaking. These values align closely with the Oxford Design Review Panel’s mission to promote well considered architecture, public realm and landscape design throughout the city.

She joins a multidisciplinary group of leading built environment practitioners who support thoughtful, sustainable growth and champion design quality that benefits local communities across Oxford.

Low carbon workspace for The Portman Estate shortlisted for BCO Awards 2026

We’re pleased that The Portman Estate Head Office has been shortlisted for the BCO Regional Awards 2026, in the Fit-Out category for projects up to 2,500m².

Shaped through close staff collaboration, the Marylebone workspace sets a low carbon benchmark for future commercial developments across the Estate. Low carbon and high recycled content materials – including Scandinavian redwood stud partitions, wood fibre insulation, clayboard and clay plaster – reduce embodied carbon while creating a warm, natural interior. 

The design balances openness with functionality, supporting hybrid, remote and in person working. A varied mix of spaces includes large meeting rooms, call booths and a flexible café style area suited to collaboration and events. The layout retains distant views to Hyde Park and incorporates curved corners that subtly reference the building’s Art Deco heritage.

The project was visited by the BCO Awards Judging Panel and the London Regional Awards will take place in April.

That Workplace Experience Podcast visits One Great Cumberland Place

We were pleased to see One Great Cumberland Place, the new head office for The Portman Estate overlooking Marble Arch, featured on That Workplace Experience Podcast this month.

In conversation with host Dan, Michael Jones of The Portman Estate and our Associate Joe Mac Mahon discuss the values underpinning the project and the process of shaping a contemporary workplace that delivers a low-carbon, people-centred office, setting a new benchmark for sustainable commercial fit-out.

The Portman Estate project is a low-carbon workspace within a restored 1920s Art Deco building. The design reflects the Estate’s forward-looking ethos and was shaped through extensive engagement to support agile, efficient working.

You can listen to the episode via That Workplace Experience Podcast.

Forest Road shortlisted for RIBA London Awards 2026

458 Forest Road, our project delivering 90 affordable homes for local first-time buyers with Pocket Living, is shortlisted for a RIBA London Award 2026.

Located in the London Borough of Waltham Forest, on a prominent site opposite Lloyd Park and the William Morris Gallery, the project provides high-quality one-bedroom homes designed to support long-term, sustainable urban living.

Communal spaces are integrated throughout the building to nurture community and wellbeing. Residents share two roof terraces with views across Lloyd Park and a south-facing courtyard.

The positive feedback from Pocket residents is testament to how the building is meeting the needs of local first-time buyers, providing a generous and carefully crafted place to call home.

Shortlisted projects will be visited by a regional jury, with winners announced in the spring.

View the project page to read more. View the list of shortlisted projects at RIBA.org.

Works complete on Grade II listed Royal Arsenal Gatehouse

We recently completed work on Royal Arsenal Gatehouse in Woolwich – reopening this historic gateway to the public for the first time in 30 years.

Won through invited competition in November 2021. Proposals for the Grade II listed Royal Arsenal Gatehouse in Woolwich were developed for the Greenwich Enterprise Board and the Royal Borough of Greenwich working in collaboration with LDA, Studio Weave and Turner Works. The project has been delivered as a part of wider proposals funded by the Future High Streets Fund and Woolwich’s Heritage Action Zone.

Built in 1828–9, the Gatehouse has witnessed nearly two centuries of change. When Plumstead Road was constructed in the 1970s, the building became separated from the Royal Arsenal, and security concerns eventually closed the ground floor to public access in the 1990s.

Our proposal introduces a protective ‘baldacchino’ structure through the centre of the building – a carefully considered intervention that balances security for the building’s inhabitants with the restoration of public passage through the original gateway.

Read more on the Royal Arsenal Gatehouse project page.

Fiona Scott reappointed as Mayor’s Design Advocate

Gort Scott Director, Fiona Scott, is reappointed as one of the Mayor’s Design Advocates. This marks Fiona’s third appointment to the role.
 
The new Mayor’s Design Advocates (MDAs) for the 2025–2028 term includes architects, urban designers, landscape architects, sustainability experts and equality, diversity and inclusion advocates, representing diverse practices and perspectives across London.
 
The 53 MDAs bring together a wide range of professional expertise and lived experience to help shape London’s neighbourhoods, streets, and public spaces for everyone.

More information about the Mayor’s Design Advocates and the Good Growth by Design programme here.

Forest Road wins the AJ Awards Housing Project 2025

We are delighted to share that 458 Forest Road has won Housing Project (up to £25 million) at the AJ Awards 2025. 

The project provides 90 affordable one-bedroom homes for first-time buyers in Walthamstow, sited opposite Lloyd Park and the William Morris Gallery. The judges described it as ‘exceptional’, ‘thoughtful’ and ‘beautifully crafted’.

Forest Road shortlisted for the Civic Trust Awards 2026

458 Forest Road has been recognised as a 2026 Civic Trust Awards Regional Finalist. This awards scheme celebrates projects that make a positive contribution to the local communities they serve.

458 Forest Road provides 100% affordable housing for local first-time buyers in Walthamstow. Communal spaces have been thoughtfully integrated into the design to foster a sense of community and wellbeing among residents. Two roof terraces, a south-facing communal courtyard and a large, light lobby area serve as welcoming, shared environments where residents can relax, interact and socialise.

Blank flank walls at street corners have been designated for Morris-inspired murals by local artist Adriana Jaroslavsky as part of a growing street art tradition in Walthamstow. Commissioned by Hive Curates, one of these murals can be seen towards the rear of the photo.

The project will now be reviewed by the Civic Trust Awards National Judging Panel for consideration for a National Award or National Highly Commended.

Jonathan Mann joins RIBA Principal Designer Register

We are pleased to share that Jonathan Mann, Associate and Sustainability & Compliance Lead at Gort Scott, has joined the RIBA Principal Designer Register.

Jonathan gained this accreditation through the RIBA’s rigorous assessment process, attaining the higher-level membership of ‘Principal Designer Higher-Risk Buildings’. The achievement recognises his capability to lead on health and safety and Building Regulations matters and highlights his deep technical knowledge, experience and commitment to maintaining the highest professional standards.

Since joining Gort Scott in 2020, Jonathan has led major projects across office, life science and housing sectors. He also heads our Environmental Action Group. With long-held interests in safe, inclusive, accessible and sustainable design, Jonathan engages actively with statutory and environmental compliance as a means to spreading best practice and creating a better, more responsible built environment.

This recognition reflects Jonathan’s dedication to embedding and delivering design quality across all our projects.

Competition win for our Molkenmarkt Berlin proposals

We are pleased to announce that our proposals for Molkenmarkt in Berlin’s historic centre have been awarded joint-first prize in a competition run by WBM - Wir gestalten Berlin and Senatsverwaltung für Stadtentwicklung. 

Our submission was the product of an enjoyable collaboration with Duplex Architekten and Kim Nalleweg Architekten, designed as a cohesive group with a similar set of elements and themes. 

The residential courtyard building, designed by Gort Scott, is situated within the urban block and responds to the different character of two courtyards. A composed rhythm of projecting and inset loggia animate ‘Gartenhof’, and provide residents with access to green space in the heart of the city. While the more urban ‘Stadthof’ is conceived on a civic scale, with a gridded access gallery acting as a privacy screen for residents. 

The competition entries will be on display in a public exhibition opening January 2026. We look forward to sharing more soon. 

Congratulations also to our shared first prize winner, blrm Architekt*innen.