conservation and renewal

The Bishop Centre, Godolphin & Latymer School

THE BISHOP CENTRE, GODOLPHIN & LATYMER SCHOOL

CLIENT: GODOLPHIN & LATYMER SCHOOL

LISTED GRADE II*

Burrell Foley Fischer were commissioned by the Godolphin & Latymer School to convert the large Grade II* listed redundant church, adjacent to the school site, into a multi-purpose performance space. Uses would include drama performances, musicals, concerts, assemblies, examinations, teaching and parents’ evenings. 

The church is a lofty gothic revival building designed by William Butterfield and completed in 1859. Originally built for a large 19th century congregation, the space can accommodate the whole of the 805-person school community for assemblies – a great advantage for the school that previously had had to communicate via video link to staff and students distributed about the school in assorted small halls.

The many uses of the church required extensive service and technical infrastructure. New equipment for lighting, scenery and sound has been discreetly introduced to preserve the architectural drama of the original Butterfield interior. A stage riser and variable height staging units are let into the nave floor to allow a number of different theatrical configurations.

Acoustic measures to vary the lively, over-reverberant church acoustic include retractable blinds and drapes. Scenery and lighting bars can be flown up to the rafters. Theatrical balconies have been inserted into the side aisles – an intervention that is both practical and symbolic of the transformation of the church.

 
We are extremely fortunate to have such a state-of-the-art performance space for the girls to work in.

What makes the Bishop Centre unique is its flexibility, which is all down to clever design. With the ability to transform the space into a number of configurations, including end-on, thrust, traverse and in-the-round, the possibilities for our theatrical productions are endless.

The girls are now able to learn how to run a fully functioning theatre, with high-tech lighting, audio and AV equipment. This is a space in which there a few limits to what the girls can create theatrically.
— Sarah Adams, Head of Drama