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The Shed, Meigle, Scotland Building, Project, Photo, Design, Property,
Image
The Shed, Meigle, Scotland : Architecture Information
Key Development by LJRH Architects in Perthshire, Scotland, Europe
Drummond House The Shed, Meigle, Perthshire
2009
LJRH Architects
Drummond House - The Shed
The exceptionally raw and beautiful agricultural landscape of Meigle,
Perthshire is the setting for a purpose built home for Mr & Mrs
Peter Drummond.
Designed by Graeme Hutton, Dean of the Dundee University School of
Architecture and the late David Jameson of the University of Dundee
and LJRH Chartered Architects the new building is designed to extend
a preoccupation with 'Place, Programme and Presence' as a guiding
narrative in the creation of new Scottish work. Architects rarely
discuss or readily acknowledge their initial visceral responses to
a 'Place' in the design process, yet the architects believe recognising
and interpreting an appropriate response to be key in the creation
of buildings which resonate with their surroundings.

Drummond House photos © Graeme Hutton
In this instance the existing landscape was so commanding, of such
scale, that primacy of thought was given to the formal and material
quality of the finished object. The architects wished neither to 'suburbanise'
nor 'modernize' the setting, rather to extend and amplify its inherent
qualities.
Existing on the site were two simply formed storage barns. Buildings
of this type are an accepted 'deeply known' typology and it is the
manipulation of this typology which forms the key conceptual idea
for the Drummond House, or 'Shed' as the clients have christened it.
The house presents as a composition of two 'strangely familiar' objects
- a one and a half storey barn and linked garage with workshop/studio
above. The form of these has been inflected by both the 'place' -
the ridge of the main house climbs toward the more dominant aspect
- and 'programme' - the ridge of the garage/workshop/studio climbs
toward Alyth, the birthplace of Mrs Drummond who will use the space
as a sewing room. The resulting distortion both creates a tension
and can be read as a metaphor for the deceptively undulous landscape
surrounding the dwelling.
Internally the ground floor is a carefully articulated open plan which
allows variation in volume and a degree of segregation between functions.
Floor to ceiling glazing engages the landscape directly with the living
spaces. This is in stark contrast to the 'attic rooms' which are by
contrast deliberately introvert.
It is the surrounding landscape which prescribes an earthen palette
of brick to harmonise with the tilled soil. The zinc roof is cantilevered
at the south west corner to both emphasize its presence and, with
no boundary features of any kind, capture an external sitting space
between the interior and the landscape.
David Jameson died last year before the project was complete but the
design marks a fitting tribute thanks to Mr & Mrs Drummond who,
from the outset, recognised the importance of architecture and have
self-built 'The Shed' in accordance with the architects' ideas.
21 May 2009
Great Result for Scotland in UK Architecture Awards
Unprecedented Seven Scottish Winners for 2009 RIBA Awards
The Royal Incorporation of Architects in Scotland (RIAS) is pleased
to announce the winners of the 2009 Royal Institute of British Architects
(RIBA) Awards. An unprecedented seven projects in Scotland will receive
awards. David Dunbar, President of the Royal Incorporation, said:
We are delighted that Scotland has come up with such a strong
list of winners. These buildings are undoubtedly among the best in
the UK and a great credit to Scotlands architects.
Scottish Houses
RIBA Awards 2009
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Scottish Buildings - Selection
Skye House, Isle of Skye

Camustianavaig House
South Queensferry house, West Lothian

photo : Paul Zanre
South
Queensferry house
Scottish Architect Studios

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The Shed Perthshire Building : page - adrian
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