Patel Taylor Architect's work ranges from city scale planning and urban landscapes, to leading residential, mixed-use and workplace developments, education and cultural buildings. We are involved with some of the largest urban regeneration schemes in the UK.

Our designs for places and buildings reflect an approach which integrates Architecture, Landscape and Urban Design. This reconciles physical, economic and social issues; it also helps us find solutions that bring added value and heightened delight for users.

Our work is varied, but all of our designs begin by developing a thorough understanding of the site and its context, and by working closely with our clients to ensure that the programme meets their present and anticipated needs. In this way we aim to respond in a unique way to the potential of each project, orchestrating space and light, structure and materials, to create a place that exceeds our clients’ expectations, enriching the lives of those who use it and contributing to the wider environment.

Over more than twenty years of practice we have gained the experience that enables us to manage time and resources effectively to achieve these goals across a wide range of building types, and in sensitive urban and rural contexts.

We believe that well-considered architecture results from the ability to maximise economic value through skilful spatial organisation and detailing, while responding inventively to the physical and social context to ensure the proposals address planning issues. Nowhere is this truer than in residential and mixed-use projects, where creating an enjoyable experience for the individual is the basis of the wider economic, social and environmental values we aim to create through all our work.

A recurring theme of our educational and cultural buildings is clarity of organisation around a well-defined route linking a sequence of key spaces. Depending on the programme these spaces may be open and public or protective and private, but in each project the underlying architectural approach is the same: through the manipulation of space, natural light and carefully crafted materials and details we aim to ensure that our buildings combine a stimulating journey of discovery with legibility and ease of use.

At every scale our work is about ‘place-making’, considering landscape design as integral to the overall architectural vision. Our landscape designs range from delicate horticulture to the engineering of dock edges and large-scale earth moving, and in every project we aim to add economic and social value to the wider environment. Nowhere is this more evident than in our work at the urban scale, where the spatial framework of parks and gardens, streets and squares helps to organise neighbourhoods and transform the value of land.

We create settings for both public and private events, such spaces are an essential part of the fabric of civilized life.

Patel Taylor have worked on many interesting workspace buildings, often to tight budgets, to create attractive, stimulating workspaces which reflect the organisational culture and character of our occupier clients.

We understand that aspects of the workplace increasingly function as social space and that our design solutions need to provide flexible, individual solutions that are appealing, contemporary and economic which will appeal to a wide range of users. We also understand the programmes that drive developers’ approach to delivering workplace schemes and the need to understand the market for the space.

Evolved and variously settled over time, urban settings have a unique history and underlying spatial order. When asked to intervene in such places our first aim is always to understand this underlying logic. By evaluating its strengths and limitations we are able to propose ways of structuring space and organising activities that create an appropriate framework for new development.

Enhancing the existing community’s needs and aspirations and creating a synergy with the aspirations of new inhabitants, careful urban design strengthens the character of a place and animates it with new attractions and amenities.

Athletes Village

London 2012

Springfield

London 2012

Eastside City Park

Birmingham 2012

Lowther Children’s Centre

Barnes, London 2010

Putney Wharf Tower

London 2003

Thames Barrier Park

London 2001

Reims Cultural Quarter

France 1991

Earls Court

London 2012

University of Essex

Colchester 2014

In-fill House, Camden

London 2011

University of Wales

Aberystwyth 2001

Royal Victoria Square

London 2001

Orleans House Gallery

Twickenham 2009

Greenwich Peninsula

London 2008

Thames View Housing

Barking, London 2011

Stanley Mills

Stroud 2013

Newfoundland

London 2008

Athletes Village Guidelines

London 2009

Thames View

London 2009

Bankside Walkway

London 2001

Bow Schools

London 2014

Portland College

Mansfield 2006

Canary Wharf Footbridge

London 2004

Bankside Study

London 1995

Putney House

London 2006

Private House

Oxford 2005

Benslow Music School

Hitchin, Hertfordshire 2001

Jubilee Park

London 2000

Sneinton Market Square

Nottingham 2012

Woolston Riverside

Southampton 2008

Stratford Masterplan

London 1998

Lecture Hall

University of Essex 2007

Peace Park

Leicestershire 2001

Ayr Citadel

Scotland 1994

Putney Wharf Riverside

London 2003

Imperial War Museum

Salford 2009

Ty Isaf Arts Centre

North Wales 1990

Burgess Park

London 2009

Bere Mill

Hampshire 2003

Market Hall

Ashton-under-Lyne 2007

Silvertown Quays

London 2002

Framework Plan

Bracknell 2005

ASHA Centre

London 2001

Landscape Framework

Ashton-under-Lyne 2004

Atelier One

Fitzrovia, London 1991

Antwerp Docks

Antwerp 1990

Seagrave Road

London 2015

Old Market Square

Nottingham 2004

St Paul’s School

London 2008

Lauriston Studios

London 1991

Camden Studio

London 1993

Penarth Headland

Cardiff Bay 2005

Pontoon Dock

London 2008

Chelsea Barracks

London 2009

United Reform Church

Richmond 2006

Battersea Apartment

London 1998

Battersea Penthouse

London 1999

Lowther Primary School

Barnes, London 2012

Visitor Centre

London 2000

Sherwood Forest

Nottingham 2006

Clerkenwell Studio

London 2011

Earls Court Public Realm

London 2012

Pace Training Centre

London 1994

Studio

Kent 1993

Wembley Masterplan

London 2012