Princeton University Living
Learning
and
MICA is an award winning practice working in the UK and internationally across architecture, heritage and landscape projects. We work at all scales and levels, from urban design to individual buildings, interiors and furniture, designed for long term institutional sustainability.
We are pleased to enclose this brochure of our long, strong track record of work in schools, colleges and universities with a focus on recent student accommodation projects which create inspiring and uplifting environments for living and learning.
Our long history of designing sustainably was developed as Rick Mather Architects and is followed through in the ethos and award winning track record of MICA.
Our experience
Clive Booth Student Village, Oxford Brookes
1035 Undergraduate rooms
13 buildings townhouse and flats
Kitchens, social and common spaces, nursery
H B Allen Centre, Keble College Oxford
250 graduate study rooms 30 kitchens, common rooms, cafe, research centre and external works, academic hotel, 12,250 sqm
Completed September 2019
Stowe School
212 communal bedrooms, flexible teaching facilities, 4 staff family living facilities, common rooms, art school, gardens and terraces
Completed 2008 to 2019
Arco Building, Sloane Robinson, Keble College
113 study bedrooms, 72 refurbishment rooms, 1 + 2 pairs, universal flexibility, shared kitchen/ dining rooms, seminar rooms, 250-seat flexible multi-purpose theatre, dining hall and recital room, 6 seminar rooms
Completed 1995 - 2002
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Large scale student living
Cheng Yu Tung building, Jesus College Oxford
68 en-suite rooms (4 accessible)
4 studio flats (fellows) 6-10 students per kitchen, 3300m² retail, new teaching and learning facility, digital hub, new quad and adjacent landscape, café, exhibition space, gym 8500m² new build
Completed September 2022
Hands Building, Mansfield College Oxford
73 en-suite rooms (3 accessible)
2 fellows accommodation Institute with library and office spaces and lecture theatre, landscape
Completed September 2017
University of East Anglia
Constable Terrace and Nelson Court, Townhouses and flats, 800 graduate rooms
Completed 1993
Pembroke College Oxford
77 graduate study bedrooms, kitchens and common rooms, 8 studio flats
Completed August 2023
Aerial Sketch
We are a team of 22 qualified architects within a wider group of around 30 people. We are industry leaders in designing exemplary low energy masterplans and developments in complex settings, including both the earliest and largest Passivhaus developments, carbon negative structures and recently the ‘greenest’ building of its kind in Oxford.
Affiliations
Practice Partners W Programme
Paradigm Network
Social Mobility Fund
Architects Declare signatory
Advocates of London Energy
transformation Initiative (LETI)
Advocates of RIBA 2030 Climate Challenge
NLA Partners
Accreditations
RIBA Chartered Practice
RIBA Specialist Conservation Architect
Certified Passivhaus Designer
LEED Building Design and Construction
Accredited Professional
UKAS ISO 9001, 14001, 45001
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2030
We are signatories for RIBA
Cities
Streets Buildings Paths Spaces Parts
Services offered:
Architecture
Masterplanning
Urban Design
Conservation Architecture
Landscape Design
Interior Design
Model Making
Passivhaus Design
Planning Support
Strategic Advice + Consultancy
Graphic Design
BIM + BIM Management
MICA’s team brings extensive experience building new homes for students in sensitive environments: we have completed more than 330 homes for students in England in the last two years with a further 1,230 in development: as a result we have a strong sense of 21st century young people and their values. For MICA, each project is a blank page: we realize that our clients’ needs vary and therefore we are good listeners and work collaboratively to envision high quality residences to create the foundation environment for learning.
We design to Passivhaus principles, carefully controlling solar gains and preventing overheating, while providing ideal ventilation, for student homes that provide optimal study spaces.
MICA
Bed 5 Storage Stowe School, Stowe Twin, 16sqm 6th form Typical room typology Four-bed En-suite Two-bed En-suite 16 m2 Single En-suite 10 m2 Double rooms Typical room typology Bed 1 Bed 2 Bed 3 Bed 4 Bed 5 seat Window Storage Storage Entrance Storage Storage Cobham 1 bed 10 sqm Four-bed En-suite Two-bed En-suite 16 m2 Single En-suite 10 m2 Sidney Lodge Cheltenham Ladies’ College Single. 11 sqm 6th form MICAs tested precedent layouts for various student room types West House Stowe School Single. 11 sqm 6th form Cobham House Stowe School Twin, 16 sqm 6th form Geoffrey Arthur Building Pembroke College, Oxford Double, 12sqm Graduate + undergraduate Northgate House Jesus College Oxford Double, 15sqm Graduate Geo ery Arthur Building 12 sqm Northgate house 15 sqm Typical room typology A living dorm Bed 1 Bed 2 Bed 3 Bed 4 Bed 5 Corner window seat Window 32.5 m2 11 m2 Washroom Storage Storage Entrance Storage Storage Four-bed En-suite 1:100 Double rooms Pioneering Passive Design Principles Constable Terrace, University of East Anglia
Student Homes
West House, Stowe School
Northgate, Jesus College
Designing the interior of the room to nurture learning, provide a place of respite and relaxation, an intimate space to socialise, communicate but also relax and reflect. Getting this space right unlocks the project, and becomes the building block for the whole building. Establishing this module with the insight of will serve the students needs. Because the room is so important
Diagrammatic layout shows the potential to maximise efficiency through the largest number of rooms served by a single staircase. Short corridors create a sense of intimacy, and accessible bedrooms are located with immediate proximity to circulation and social space.
Applying our research and specifications to develop sustainable proposals
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14 MICA Study bedroom fitted and loose furniture Cellular unit which determines the building configuration and form. Aspects to discuss Contract furniture suppliers, repairs, maintenance and replacements. Flooring: engineered timber, linoleum, broadloom or carpet tiles Small power and data: by bed and desk, cleaning Natural or mechanical ventilation: Purge ventilation for cleaners, night latches or trickle vent Supply + extract, or just extract. Acoustics, greater than building regukations requirements Radiators or underfloor heating Bedroom security: deadlocks Curtains or roller blinds, blackout requirement. Full height mirror, coat hooks, additional storage Pinboards Lighting: background colour temperature Considerations If small but efficient study bedrooms are to considered, the furniture specification and the dimensions of furniture are the basis of the room layouts. This spread considers aspects of the furniture to create the optimum room for the College. Getting the right balance for storage for clothes, books, electronics, and personal items is important. Along with pinboard or wall space for photographs, and posters. If these are single rooms, creating a community beyond the study bed room, using smaller clusters around shared space. If multiple beds, enable elements of private space through low dividing walls or orientation of beds. MICA West House at Stowe School a 24 ensuite study bed sixth form boarding house Considerations for a typical Boarding House brief A toolkit for for preparing a project brief and schedule of accommodation December 2019 15 MICA Plan Plan Plan Plan Elevation Shelf Elevation Desk Elevation Elevation Elevation Full height maximised storage Open or closed shelving Safety mirror in back of door Handles: concealed or not Materials: laminate or natural wood veneer Desk + Shelving Shelves Size W. 1500mm H. 410mm D. 310mm Desk Size W. 1500mm (Varies) H. 710mm D. 700mm Standalone or fixed to wardrobe Materials: laminate or natural wood veneer. Lino inserts for durability Integrated or loose file cabinet Fixed lighting under shelf or anglepoise. Bedside Table Size W. 440mm H. 450mm D. 440mm Wall mounted, integrated power for phones and devices Single Bed Size W. 900mm (3’0”) L. 2000mm (6’3”) Mattress size Cabinbed with storage - impact on height. Headboard: fixed or wall mounted 15 MICA Plan Plan Plan Plan Elevation Shelf Elevation Desk Elevation Elevation Elevation Full height maximised storage Open or closed shelving Safety mirror in back of door Handles: concealed or not Materials: laminate or natural wood veneer Desk + Shelving Shelves Size W. 1500mm H. 410mm D. 310mm Desk Size W. 1500mm (Varies) H. 710mm D. 700mm Standalone or fixed to wardrobe Materials: laminate or natural wood veneer. Lino inserts for durability Integrated or loose file cabinet Fixed lighting under shelf or anglepoise. Bedside Table Size W. 440mm H. 450mm D. 440mm Wall mounted, integrated power for phones and devices Single Bed Size W. 900mm (3’0”) L. 2000mm (6’3”) Mattress size Cabinbed with storage - impact on height. Headboard: fixed or wall mounted
Living spaces developed from experience and research
MICA have been at the forefront of low energy design for over 40 years. We recognise our environmental responsibilities are part of a wider picture, and that our commitment to the environment runs through everything we do. From this, we have developed our own Holistic Environmental Strategy to help guide us and our clients to deliver excellence in sustainability. It is also how we deliver social impact, driving sustainable development and embodying environmental stewardship in all our projects.
It is intended as a tool to define the shared priorities for a project and the performance-based metrics required to measure success. At a practice level it identifies areas of strength, opportunities for knowledge sharing and priorities for future research and development.
The Strategy focuses on six main themes which are then detailed into a series of criteria to be monitored across the life of a project. These criteria are aligned with the UN Sustainable Goals and RIBA 2030 Sustainable Outcomes and refer to further detailed guidance from LETI, BREEAM, WELL and the UKGBC Net Zero Framework. It is a live document that is refined as we test it on our projects and updated to reflect in-house research and changing industry standards.
The Strategy also shapes how we operate as a business and our commitment to the highest standard of social and environmental performance. Key criteria include staff wellbeing, quality assurance and the annual review of our carbon footprint, which can be found here.
Through this we can offer our clients a fully comprehensive approach to how best to tackle key issues and deliver strategies towards net zero carbon.
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Holistic sustainability
Cities
Thinking strategically about how we live
Streets
Promoting vibrant, diverse and healthy public spaces
Buildings
Delivering high performance, low energy regenerative design solutions
Creating opportunities for people and communities Paths
Spaces
Creating healthy and uplifting environments
Parts
Putting it all together
MICA views the situation of any project from a holistic sustainability starting point. We work with clients to help them define the pathway to net zero for their estates, from the financing and procurement, to the energy strategy across campuses, to the design of new buildings or adaptive reuse for minimal energy consumption and increased biodiversity. We are pioneers in low-energy design, in alternative energy sources, low embodied carbon construction and we create optimal environments in which people thrive.
Ground Source Heat Pumps at Keble College
Lyric Theatre light-filled atrium BREEAM Excellent
Illustrative section through new accommodation buildings and refurbished block in constrained urban historic setting
Regenerative Campus
Wellington College, Berkshire New Energy Centre feeds existing historic campus
Our architecture places the experience of the user at the heart of the project. This begins from the earliest stakeholder engagement at the commencement of a project, and we warmly welcome the opportunity to interact with our clients in creative and meaningful ways to draw out the brief for the project.
Human centered design, with excellent daylighting but controlled glare; thermal comfort with taking advantage of passive solar gains, biophilia through internal and external greenery that also mitigates heat islands, all lead to places that uplift the users. This is embodied as much in residential and education spaces, as it is in sport, dance and other creative physical activities.
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Robin Geffen cafe at the H B Allen Centre, Keble College
Wellbeing Centre at Wellington College
Hicks Bolton landscaped playspace
Health and Wellbeing
Lyric Theatre Hammersmith
We create inspirational learning environments by answering students social, learning, and working needs. These types of welcoming, pleasurable spaces encourage deep emotional attachments between students and the University, while offering unique ways of collaborating and interacting with fellow learners and information.
We have worked with pioneers in academic and industry fields to create spaces for virtual reality experiences, interactive digital hubs, and centers for mobile robotics, all of which feed into our ever-evolving bank of knowledge on education space design.
We are equipped with the tools to collaborate with educators and re-think the types of spaces that encourage creative learning and critical thinking.
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Oxford Robotics Institute, Keble College Flexible workshop and experimentation space to allow for a diverse and developing programme of research.
Future Learning
Northgate digital hub, Jesus College
MICA is adept at understanding the potential in existing buildings and adpating the to new uses, capitalising on the existing embodied carbon, and giving it a new lease of life, breathing new life into existing fabric.
We are equally comfortable working with historic and modern building fabric: we replaced a dingy undercroft with generous social dining space at Centrepoint in London’s Soho. Our work for the East Ham civic centre created a new sixth form college within a former technical college, brining unexpected flexibility to the historic asset. Our deep energy retrofit approach to deep energy retrofit means the new buildings are efficient to operate long into the future.
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North entrance restored to expose original finishes
Newham Sixthform new science classrooms and laboratories
Lincoln’s Inn library reworked stair
Adaptive re-use
Hayward and de Breyne, Keble College Oxford 72 rooms, 4 phases student accommodation refurbishment
Goodenough College, Refurbishment of Post graduate and academic fellows in central Bloomsbury
We know that the comfort of the pillow matters as much (or more) to the user as the loveliness of the setting and the impact of the facade. MICA guides clients in selection of everything from hard and soft furnishings suitably robust for vigorously used social spaces, through to the fabrics and colours of blinds, curtains and pinboards in the more inmate spaces of study bedrooms.
We create inspiring, relaxing and uplifting communal spaces. Large common rooms can offer basic cooking facilities for student use, which can be secured away for other events. The spaces will be designed to be open and inviting, connecting seamlessly to outdoor space to expand the space and encourage time outdoors all year round. In addition to this we suggest smaller, more intimate and reflective common spaces which allow for smaller groups to gather and socialise or study together in close proximity to their rooms.
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Student dining and common room space with views out
West House social space for students in common space outside study rooms
Light-filled, generous interior circulation spaces Flexible study space with cafe facilities
Communal Spaces
H B Allen Centre cafe and common spaces
East range cafeteria, kitchen and study space for students, with access to new outdoor terrace at Mansfield College Oxford
Over the last twenty years our team has helped the University of Oxford to navigate the substantial pedagogical and typological transformations that have occurred in higher education, brought about by the increasing demand for 24 hour accessible, socially innovative, and digitally sophisticated spaces for research and learning. Our emphasis on critical thinking and creative problem- solving, along with extensive client engagement, has allowed the creation of dynamic and flexible buildings that blur the boundaries of learning and social spaces, all within the strict confines of a historic city and its heritage buildings.
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Keble College Parks Road Campus
Northgate, Jesus College 2022
University of Oxford
“We are interested in buildings as pieces of the city, in the weave of urban fabric, in making places, in efficiency, in environmental design, in new and old, and in sensitive and respectful design.
Building in Oxford demands these considerations whilst also inviting rewarding client collaborations and unique opportunities for architects and for architecture.”
- Stuart Cade, Director at MICA
We have worked with Keble College, one of the largest residential colleges of Oxford University, continuously since 1995, completing two new student accommodation buildings, various renovation projects and a new bike shelter. Our largest project with Keble to date, the H B Allen Centre completed in 2019. This ongoing collaboration has been fruitful for all parties, and we regularly engage their alumni and other donors with presentations of our work at social events.
Project Stats
Masterplan (1994)
Porters Lodge: new accessible College entrance and lodge combined with new accommodation and sets (1992)
Arco: 93 study bedrooms, shared kitchen/dining rooms, seminar rooms (1995)
Hayward and de Breyne: 4 phases Student accommodation refurbishment, 72 rooms in total (1998 to 2002)
Sloane Robinson: 250-seat flexible multi-purpose theatre, dining hall and recital room, 6 seminar rooms and 20 study bedrooms (2002)
Library Refurbishment: feasibility study for new library entrance and step-free access combined with additional reader space (2018)
Liddon Quad: landscape amendment to central Keble quad to provide step-free access to all door thresholds including Hall, Chapel and Library (2019)
Bike Shelter (2016)
H B Allen Centre: 250 study bedrooms, 30 kitchens, common rooms, cafe, research centre and external works (2019)
“The client was rightly delighted with the solution which resulted in such high standard accommodation, built at half the cost of a traditional Oxbridge residential building. Nevertheless it is a fitting neighbour to those by Butterfield.”
- Judges comment, British Construction Industry Awards
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Sloane Robinson 2002
Conference spaces with views out to Newman Quad
25-year relationship with Keble College
1995
ARCO, Keble College
Acland House supported on piles whilst basement slab is cast below
Subterranean collaborative learning and research centre
Home for innovation and entrepreneurship
The H B Allen Centre integrates a historic TG Jackson building within the heart of the campus. Among the challenges the construction team faced was that of excavating under the Jackson Building and constructing an entirely new basement and foundations without it collapsing.
Beneath the H B Allen Centre quad, a 2,000m2 open plan space has been designed for research and laboratories. Flexibly configured, the first two tenants are the Robotics Institute and venture capital from Oxford Sciences Innovation who provide incubator and accelerator space for post-graduate enterprises.
1-3 Student Accommodation
G Research Centre
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LG Mobile Robotics Institute
Street view of the building and extruded windows
Interior view of student accomodation
Student Hub
The H B Allen Centre
Student Accommodation
Student Cafe + Common Rooms spill out to 21st Century Quad
Office and Research space with access to sunken gardens
Project Stats
250 student rooms
1-3 G LG
12,2502 standalone research building
2,000m2 flexible research space
Awards
Ox Fest Prop Awards 2020, Project of the Year – Winner
Planning Awards, Placemaking Award for Design Excellence – High Commendation
A new connection across the site offers access to other facilties and provides new outdoor spaces for students to gather in
Planning the development and expansion of the University of East Anglia campus for 25 years, MICA’s masterplan identified sites for new construction by subtly changing the campus datum from a raised deck to ground level and establishing a series of buildings which created a series of ‘outdoor rooms’.
Completed buildings include the multi-award winning student housing at Constable Terrace and Nelson Court, along with the UEA Drama Studio. Catering for no less than 800 students, the new low energy accommodation and communal facilities are so efficient that no central heating is required.
Project Stats
Constable Terrace and Nelson Court, residences for 800 students
Awards
RIBA Award
Architectural Design Award Civic Trust Award
Low energy living
University of East Anglia
Engaging with nature
Project Stats
1,035 graduate rooms
13 buildings townhouse and flats kitchens, common rooms
Clive Booth Student Village
Aerial sketch of Clive Booth Student Village
The development provides 1,035 new student rooms in buildings containing flats of up to 10 residents. Designed inside-out and outside-in with a focus on provision of the best possible student bedroom, natural lighting, maximisation of available space and configuration. Building orientation, privacy and frontages have been particularly prominent considerations in this approach.
MICA Kitchen Bedroom Bedroom Bedroom Bedroom Dining Living Covered entry Stair WC + Shower WC + Shower WC + Shower WC + Shower
Axonometric view of a pair of Townhouses: Ground floor and typical upper floor plans
Kitchen / Living Space Ensuite study bedroom Ensuite study bedroom Ensuite study bedroom Ensuite study bedroom
Typical kitchen/ living space arrangement
Study bedroom with a view
Outdoor social rooms for healthy living
Clive Booth Student Village
Situated on the outskirts of the historic Oxford city centre, and directly on the River Thames, is the Sir Geoffrey Arthur Building 2. In this setting, MICA is developing additional high-quality graduate student accommodation including 77 single occupancy bedrooms, a common room and 8 studio rooms on the one site, bound together by sympathetic landscaping. and studio accommodation with views to the waterfront setting.
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Sketch of Pembroke College overview
Built in storage and window seats with a view in student room
Student accommodation near completion
A floodable building
Pembroke College, Oxford
Project Stats
77 graduate study bedrooms, kitchens and common rooms, 8 studios
To support and inform Wellington College’s decision making process, a 25 year estate development strategy was prepared by MICA to identify and explore potential development site. A range of new flexible buildings and spaces have been identified in relation to sports, performing arts, accommodation, teaching, alongside new typologies in support of social interaction and informal learning. Strategic investment in the College site wide infrastructure include new low carbon solutions, improved visitor access, and the creation of a series of new character areas to improve daily life at the College.
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1 2 3 4 5 6 8 7 SPORTS CLUSTER SPORTS CLUSTER STAFF CLUSTER BOARDING CLUSTER STAFF CLUSTER SCIENCE CLUSTER STAFF CLUSTER STAFF CLUSTER MIXED USE BOARDING/ SUPPORT CLUSTER SOCIAL CLUSTER Existing zones and Uses Uses Key Common Accommodation Sports Staff Accommodation Support Academic Performing Arts Mixed Use 1.Old Laundry Site 2.Wellesley Quad and Queen’s Court 3.Music School 4.Laundry and IT 5.Science 6.Salassie Courts 7. Raglan House 8.Grounds Sheds, Turf, College, Shop, Dance
Woodland Quad new boarding and accessible landscape (Currently on-site)
Sixth Form Hub (currently on-site)
Wellbeing Centre (currently in design development)
Landscape Estates Wellington
Long term strategic site masterplan with accompanying enabling buildings for Wellington College, which identifies key development sites for a 25 year development programme, in spacious wooded grounds of 400 acres in and around the original Grade 1 listed Victorian school campus.
Main College Application site South Front Chapel Main Entrance Old Laundry Buildings Armoury Cottages CCF stores CCF Parade Grounds/ Fields
College
Hidden from the historic south front the Old Laundry site offers a unique experience for the College in bringing forward new boarding and day facilities. Sensitively integrated into the woodland setting that enhance connections across the College.
The boarding house is for both boys and girls with 70 beds with shared facilities, entrance staff, common space in the centre and flanked by a wing of boys and a wing of girls. The buildings are arranged around the perimeter of the site - creating a central woodland quad which brings the landscape into the lived setting and offers biodiversity enhancements
44 MICA First Second Upper Common Rooms AHM HM Main Stair Terrace Terrace
Ground
Study bedroom
Social study space with views to landscape
A new woodland quad
Wellington College
A new pastoral and Wellbeing Centre situated on the edge of Wellington College’s historic estate, provides a rare opportunity to create modern, high quality purposed built centre to support pupils in a holistic setting.
Student Wellbeing
Wellington College
Working with Stowe: 20 years experience at Stowe School from estates masterplan to delivering four new boarding houses and an Art School.
Rick Mather Architects win job 2000 2001 Stowe School Masterplan (quasi-adopted: EH and NT) Planning Consent Girls’ Boarding Houses Q+S 2006 2007 Queen’s House (Ph1) Completed Stanhope House (Ph2) Completed 2008 Art School Planning Consent 2009
Masterplan to delivery Stowe School
Art School Completed 2010 Chapel Court Design Comp. 2014 Chapel Court + West Houses Planning Consent 2016 Feasibility West Boarding Houses 2015 West House Complete 2018 Chapel Court Complete Wynne Gallery Refurbishment Complete 2019 2023
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“MICA brought superb master-planning and coherence to the academic area and allowed the School to develop an educational vision which has made Stowe into one of the top independent schools in the UK.”
- Dr Anthony Wallersteiner, Headmaster
Working Model of masterplan
Chapel Court 2016 - 60 Boarders
Stowe West Five Boarding House
Regenerate Estates
“Stowe now offers the best teaching facility of its kind anywhere in the UK.”
- Brian Johnson, the Head of Stowe Art School
When Stowe School decided to admit females for the first time, our team were engaged to design two new dedicated boarding houses, building out the tenets of the masterplan. Situated west of Stowe House, the Queen’s and Stanhope buildings respond to the shift in geometry of the historic gardens and the context of the surrounding buildings. Accommodation for 72 girls in each block.
Education Buildings?
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structure team two ground terms sustainable
Stowe under construction: Regular site visits, concrete frame, completed student room
Responding to context
Queen’s and Stanhope
Queen’s and Stanhope
Peking University HSBC Business School is the highest ranking university in China, based in Beijing and Shenzhen. PHBS UK’s vision is to create a world-class environment for education that will attract the highest calibre students and promote business learning and exchange between the UK and China. The new Foxcombe Hall campus benefits from a quiet, rural setting that specifically suits postgraduate study. The new buildings will be delivered to achieve Passivhaus Classic accreditation.
Prime Passivhaus accommodation
HSBC Business School, Peking University
“The Hands Building, designed by MICA Architects, is an exemplar for student and academic accommodation, and a model off sustainability, which significantly reduces the running costs for the College.”
- Baroness Helena Kennedy QC, Principal
Embedded in setting
Hands Building, Mansfield College
College Oxford
Hands Building, Mansfield
The Hands Building was constructed with an innovative carbon negative CLT frame. This offers the benefit of carbon sequestration within the timber, classing the building as the greenest of its kind in Oxford.
“The Hands Building, designed by MICA Architects, is an exemplar for student and academic accommodation, and a model off sustainability, which will significantly reduce the running costs for the College.”
- Baroness Helena Kennedy QC, Principal
The Hands Building provides en-suite accommodation for 73 students
Illustration of how the level change is used to maximise potential of the new building and how landscape integrates the building into it’s setting
Hands Building Awards
Structural Timber Awards 2018, Shortlisted Oxford Preservation Trust 2018, New Building Certificate
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Low-Carbon Living Hands Building, Mansfield College
The Hands Building, Bonavero Institute of Human Rights
We have been engaged by Cheltenham Ladies’ College to create a 25-year masterplan, and to complete the outline design of two new boarding houses, focusing on creating stronger links through the town to better integrate the existing scattered boarding houses. The proposals will house approximately 190 students.
“We have been impressed by MICA’s understanding of our requirements, the attention to details and their ability to communicate with our stakeholders with high quality presentations.”
- Edwin Wai, Estates Project Manager
New student accommodation within heritage setting of Christ ChurchRed brick complements the existing lodge and sits harmoniously in the context
60 MICA Sidney Lodge Farnley Lodge St Margarets Roderic Glenlee Sports Fields Sports Fields St Hilda Beale & Cambray Eversleigh Gransden St Austin St Helen Bayshill Bunwell Bayshill Tennis Court Main College Elizabeth House 65m 120m 100m
Consolidation of a common route across the campus
Legacy and Future Flexibility
Cheltenham Ladies’ College
An appraisal of the built fabric, accessibility and educational facilities of the main Grade I, II* Listed campus, to improve facilities and locate sites for development and refurbishment.
Cheng Yu Tung building is a new mixed-use development for Jesus College, Oxford with ground floor retail as well as academic facilities and accommodation on the second floor upward. The lower floors of the complex add a new open-data and digital institute for Oxford University designed to promote interdisciplinary research and knowledge exchange.
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New en-suite study bedrooms, with fantastic views, received positive buzz from students
Kitchen, dining and common spaces are light-filled and generous. Furniture pieces were chosen to ensure design quality, longevity, and sustainability.
The College arrangement centres around a new quad, study spaces and common rooms face the outdoor space to create a social live / study environment
City Living
Jesus College Oxford
“With this new development, we are not just embracing the future of learning: we’re shaping it.”
Jesus College hub building viewed from the Cornmarket thoroughfare
- Professor Sir Nigel Shadbolt, Jesus College Principal
The development accommodates increased student numbers including mixed tenure residential spaces: graduate students and visiting fellows, resulting from its introduction of Computer Science and an expansion of postgraduate places; delivers improved space for students and staff; and provides more access to the work of the College.
The building offers external landscaped spaces arranged across multiple levels for gathering and rest, as well as flexible adaptable social spaces.
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Key
1. Digital Hub meeting rooms
2. Cafe / study space
3. Cafe kitchen / servery
4. Student bedrooms
5. Student kitchens
1 1 2 3 4 4 4 5 5 5 5 5 6
6. Fourth Quad
Quad as a communal space, Cheng Yu Tung Building
Building with high street frontage
In 2022 MICA was appointed to develop a masterplan for Jesus College to complete the historic College as a city block and transform a large corner of the historic site.
New student residential accommodation for students and Fellows’ frames a new courtyard providing a significant population and vibrancy. High above the quad, are a series of roof gardens and an exquisite music room, enjoying unmatched views across the ‘dreaming spires of Oxford’.
– A fifth quad
– New ensuite boarding rooms overlook the new space
– Quad is activated by common college facilities
– Improved accessibility across the site
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Optimising the site Jesus College Masterplan
MICA Architects have been appointed to review the College’s Domus site for the decades ahead and create a masterplan that will guide all future built development. This will ensure that carefully planned interventions and development align to a cohesive vision that provides a pathway towards net zero CO2 emissions, provides universal access, and enhances spatial efficiencies across the College. MICA have led a number of consultation events to engage the college communities and are developing proposals for a number of opportunities across the campus.
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Re-imagined outdoor space and connections to Buttery, Upper Hall
Student hub in refurbished Blythe building which currently has multiple emplty under utilised spaces
Open spaces for study alongside intimate and relaxed zones
Engaging consultation events, meetings and consultation methods.
Climate, Access, Optimising spaces
Christ’s College Cambridge Masterplan
The new Graduate Centre for Linacre College in Oxford provides a backdrop for student life, creating a new vibrant community that is well-connected and integrated into the city. The illustrative design seeks to balance the restoration and re purposing of the site’s historic buildings with the provision of state-of-the-art new spaces to create a landmark graduate centre for Linacre College.
At the centre of the site is a new quad around which the daily activities of the campus evolve. This space is animated by a central dining hall, and cafe and study centre. An existing mature oak tree acts as a focal point.
Dining Hall Landscaped Gardens Accommodation building Quad Cafe Gym Seminar Room Servery and kitchens Study Centre External staircase and rain garden
New Graduate Centre for Oxford
Linacre College
We work at the cutting edge of learning and our design team promotes robust multi-purpose spaces where ‘form follows pedagogy’, creating environments where research and teaching drive real change. MICA’s experienced team will manage the processes required to successfully fulfil the client requirements. We will use proven and well-practiced procedures, instinct based on extensive project experience, all married with clear communication skills and openness. We will establish a clear consultation programme and matrix from the outset to ensure that the many and varied discussions are held with the right people and in the right order to inform the design.
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Post Occupancy Evaluation Workshop - Student Feedback informs future designs
Stakeholder engagement event
Engaging Process
We have extensive experience of designing contemporary buildings in the most sensitive and special settings. We take cues from the context, and marry these carefully with innovative contemporary interpretations to establish a special sense of identity. Using enduring materials which age well and naturally with the minimum of maintenance will be key to the long term success of the new building. Alongside contextual sensitivity, materials will be carefully chosen to reduce embodied carbon and achieve sustainability targets.
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Cross Laminated Timber
Concrete with low-carbon cement replacement
Clipsham Stone
West House Facade elevation
Eco waste bricks
Careful choice of materials
Cheng Yu Tung Building Jesus College
From our London offices we have infrastructure in place to work across the world and have previously established local project teams for international cultural and education projects. We have established working relationships with reliable architect practices across the United States, and look forward to making new connections in the future. Our office employs a diverse group of individuals from around the world, with registered architects across five different countries including the USA.
A project goes through thousands of hands, but we recognise a responsibility to deliver it with a small number of individuals, team members and project sponsors, always accountable and present, whether virtually or physically.
International Collaborators:
Bruner Cott - Architect of Record
SO-IL - Architects
Charcoal Blue - theatre design (UK and USA)
Atelier 10 - sustainability consultant and services engineer (UK and USA)
Silman - structural engineers
Eckersley O’Callaghan - facade consultants and structural engineers (UK and USA)
Nitche Engineering - civil engineers
Kohler Ronan - services engineers
Cerami Associates - acoustic consultant
Cline Betteridge Bernstein - lighting design
OLIN Studio - landscape architects
Omnivore - graphic designers
Ricca Design Studios - kitchen design
Stuart Lynn - cost consultant
Jensen Hughes - fire engineers
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Working in the USA
Peabody Essex Museum, Massachusetts
Baton Rouge visioning project
Metropolitan Museum of Art Plaza with Olin
3d printed protoype of digital hub
Virginia Museum of Fine Arts
In addition to MICA’s ongoing strategic masterplanning for Baton Rouge, Louisiana MICA is working in Pune, Mubai to deliver a major new college complex for Wellington College International, and also have early stage educucation college projects in the Middle East, Japan, Nigeria and India.
International work
Services. As a practice we have developed forward looking models across multiple sectors: cultural, transport, civic, and in education. MICA continuously evaluates and researches best practice and future trends across all areas of work, education and learning practices. Industries served include: Masterplanning, Creative Industries, Modern Methods of Construction, Green and circular economies, Low carbon – environmental, Healthy Streets, and Regeneration and Planning. Services provided include:
– Architecture + Planning
– Masterplanning + Urban Design
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Conservation Architecture + Heritage
– Placemaking + Landscape Design
– Net Zero Strategy + Sustainability
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Interior Design + Space Planning + FFE
– Graphics + Branding
– Signage and Wayfinding
– Passivhaus Design + Environmental Design
– Principal Designer + Health & Safety + CDM
– Technical Director + QA
– Engagement + Consultation
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Project Management + Contract Administration
– BIM Co-ordination + Management
– Architecture + Design Research
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PR + Marketing
– Visualisations + 3D modelling + Virtual Reality
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Physical Model Making
80 MICA
Consultation. We are a friendly and collaborative team and enjoy working closely with clients, consultants and communities to both deliver buildings and champion masterplans. We are medium-sized and nimble enough to adapt and change to suit and often balance the need to challenge a status-quo whilst listening and heeding. To build consensus and buy-in, we understand a need for an approach which maintains openness, allowing people to contribute. Fundraising. We have significant experience in working with donors and fund raisers and fully understand the process involved for securing funding and support for major capital projects from a wide variety of public and private sources. We know how to present and develop proposals that appeal to donors and have been instrumental in bringing key funders into projects.
“Amazing”
- Her Royal Highness Queen Elizabeth II Visiting the Honorable Society of Lincoln’s Inn
Architects Ltd
MICA
123 Camden High St London NW1 7JR +44 (0)207 284 1727 micaarchitects.com