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LONDON RETAIL / RSA HOUSE 115


KKDC three-chip LED linear light strip positioned along the cornicing provides a 2800K white light, while custom made porcelain wall fittings, chosen by the architect, help create a homely lounge feel.


GRAND IDEAS


As part of a refurbishment of the Royal Society of Art’s London headquarters, mindseye took on the challenge of creating a welcoming space in the Grade I listed building.


Since its founding in 1754, the Royal Society for the encouragement of Arts, Manufac- tures and Commerce (better know as the RSA) has stood as a champion of creative endeavour. “An enlightenment organisation committed to finding innovative practical solutions to today’s social challenges,” the society’s 27,000-strong Fellowship includes some of the world’s greatest thinkers and makers, seeking “to understand and en- hance human capability so we can close the gap between today’s reality and people’s hopes for a better world.” In 2010, the RSA invited architects to tender plans for a substantial refurbishment and


renovation of their historic headquarters on John Adam Street (named after man who originally designed the building, alongside his brother Robert, specifically for the Society).


The winning submission by Matthew Lloyd Architects fulfilled the client brief of maintaining the building’s 18th century character whilst incorporating a 21st cen- tury technological infrastructure. They in turn worked with mindseye to deliver an informal, cosy lighting scheme that would emphasise the original features of the Grade I listed building.


The architects, working in close collabora-


tion with the RSA’s House Development Committee, stipulated that recessed fixtures could not be used, so instead the team employed a combination of cove spot- lighting along with custom made porcelain wall fittings.


In the ground floor reception space, a KKDC three chip LED linear light strip positioned along the cornicing provides a 2800K white light. This creates a natural bright space with no visible fittings, whilst also accentu- ating the beautiful plaster mouldings. The ground floor ‘lounges’ were kept very informal by using warm bespoke ceramic wall lights by Boatswain selected by the


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