London, UK
“The key has been designing the building so that its character is defined by a celebration of exposed raw materials such as concrete ceilings and translucent glass walls,” said the project’s director and founder Glenn Howells.

Glenn Howells Architects along with landscape architects Chris Blandford Associates, and Camlins have designed and completed the building that would house the English National Ballet, in East London.
Wrapped in distinctive, translucent white cladding, the new center for dance provides world-class studio, costume, medical, and production facilities.
The project has been awarded a 2021 International Architecture Award by The Chicago Athenaeum: Museum of Architecture and Design and The European Centre for Architecture Art Design and Urban Studies.
These include seven full-sized rehearsal studios, dedicated engagement, and learning spaces, as well as English National Ballet School which is accommodated on the top two floors.
In addition, the building includes offices for over 200 ENB staff.
The unique main production studio features a 10m x 16m stage space and a five-story, 25m tall fly tower.

The other facilities are arranged over the three upper levels, and the building is topped with a green roof.
Rehearsal studios are typically 15 x 15 x 15m and all include an external clear glazed viewing window to help welcome the outside in.

Commissioned in 2014, the brief was to design a creative space for making and dancing that would serve as a new focal point for ballet in London.
The main challenge was providing the required extensive range of flexible, state-of-the-art facilities on a narrow site with a comparatively challenging budget.
This was achieved by creating something that is both pared-back and elegant and hard-working, with its character defined by a celebration of exposed raw materials such as concrete ceilings and translucent glass walls.

The limited material palette and the use of standard, off-the-shelf, hardworking components have helped to ensure that the building met the budget.
The ground floor is designed as a lively circulation space that acts as the soul of the building, with a public café and exhibition space encouraging interaction between the school and the company.
The building also houses spaces for back-of-house specialists such as technicians, set builders, and costume ateliers to work, enabling the company to create costumes in-house for the first time.
The translucent white cladding contrasts with the colorful surrounding buildings and allows passers-by to catch glimpses of the professional dancers as they rehearse.
This is achieved using 3,600 sqm of Linit, a white translucent glass, which provides privacy whilst offering a hint of the dynamic movement in the studios.

The production studio can also be used for ENB’s outreach program with local schools and other stakeholders.
It also gives ENB the ability to rent out spaces thus increasing the company’s financial stability at a time of diminishing public funds.
The building transforms the way in which the organization honors the original vision set out by founders Alicia Markova and Anton Dolin, whose aim was to take classical ballet of the highest quality to the widest possible audience.
Supported by the Mayor of London’s Good Growth Fund as well as the Arts Council England’s Capital Programme, the new building facilitates ENB’s new skills program, Bridging Neighbourhoods – Growing Talent, as well as providing new jobs for the area.

Project: English National Ballet
Architects: Glenn Howells Architects
Interior Designers: Space Studios
Developer: EcoWorld Ballymore
Client: English National Ballet
General Contractor: Ballymore Construction Services Ltd.
Landscape Architects: Chris Blandford Associates, and Camlins
Photographers: Hufton+Crow












