🚀 Winning Pavilion Now Open at the Barbican
🥕 To mark the close of this year’s London Festival of Architecture (LFA), powered by NLA, the Culture Mile Business Improvement District has installed a temporary greenhouse pavilion within the Barbican Estate. Designed by Studio Folk Architects with design-and-build studio Raskl, The Veggery was selected earlier this year through the open Seeds in the City design competition.
🍏 The structure is a hexagonal, domed greenhouse with a vaulted polytunnel roof, water butts standing in for columns, and a metre-tall turnip finial crowning its apex. Part garden folly, part allotment shed, it nods to the English landscape tradition while borrowing its silhouette from the Barbican’s own barrel-vaulted roofscape.
🔨 Its windows carry a pseudo-stained-glass treatment, with patterns transferred from giant paper collages produced during workshops with students from the neighbouring City of London School for Girls. The timber frames are demountable and low-tech, allowing for rapid assembly and, eventually, disassembly.
🌟 Responding to this year’s festival theme of Belonging, The Veggery is conceived as greenhouse, growing space and community pavilion in one. Inside, three bays of flexible shelving hold plants alongside potting benches, with an open area left free for events. The planting itself has been grown and propagated with the school, local residents, and community groups including the Barbican Horticultural Society.
💬 Patrick O’Keeffe, Co-founder and Director of Studio Folk Architects
“We’re really excited to see The Veggery installed in its new home, and become an extension of the Barbican’s iconic public realm for the summer. We’ve worked hard with the project team to develop a programme of activation that aims to foster a sense of shared ownership. It’s a space that does a lot – a greenhouse, an event space, a classroom and a spot for lunch – so we hope everyone can find something they enjoy in it.”
💬 Dan Rose, Director of Raskl
“Raskl has been proud to work alongside Studio Folk, LFA and Culture Mile BID to bring The Veggery to life at St Giles. Organisations like the Culture Mile BID set ambitious goals for the public realm, and projects like this only succeed when design and delivery are worked through together from the start. What makes it most exciting is the site itself – a working church, a school with its own growing programme, and a community that will actually use the space long after the festival ends. We’re glad to have helped turn a strong idea into something they can all make their own.”
💬 Eliza Grosvernor, Head of Public Programme, NLA
“The Veggery is the perfect installation to close out this year’s Festival. By involving the community in every step of the process, the structure is a true testament to this year’s theme of Belonging. It is also an homage to the Barbican; both aesthetically and functionally, celebrating the estate’s unique relationship with nature while creating a distinct space for people to come together, connect and grow.”
💬 Andrew Smith, Chair of the Culture Mile BID
“The Veggery is exactly the kind of project we aim to champion in the Culture Mile – one that brings together the various members of our community, from residents and community groups to local schoolchildren and artists, and allows them to have ownership of a space. Initiatives like this are central to our ambition to make the Culture Mile a greener, more sustainable place to work, live and visit.”
⚪ The Veggery will be on display until September 2026, with a final communal meal happening at the end of the summer period using the vegetables grown.