The site was formerly a
contaminated petrol filling station at 417
Barlow Moor Road, an
arterial route connecting
Cheshire to
Manchester city centre via the
suburb of Chorlton-cum-Hardy. The site was acquired by the Irwell Valley company in the late 1990s. The company, concerned it was acquiring the image of a "worthy-but-dull" organisation, instigated a
limited invited architectural competition in 1999 to design a scheme for approximately 20 homes on the site and invited four high-profile
architects including
Stephenson Bell (now Stephenson:ISA Studio), MBLC and Sterling Award winners
Ian Simpson and
Stephen Hodder to compete for the instruction. Each submission was submitted anonymously and the design brief was to provide "space, light and warmth, flexibility, integration of external environment, and the maximisation of natural heat, ventilation and light" with
Manchester City Council's
planning department requiring a distinctive
landmark design providing variety to a location predominantly made up of two-storey
semi-detached residential properties and low-rise retail units. The design by Stephenson Bell won the competition. Tom Bloxham, of
Urban Splash, one of the judges, admired the scheme so much that he offered to become a joint venture partner in the development. After Urban Splash came on board the scheme was altered slightly to provide underground parking with additional
duplex units along its front
elevation on Barlow Moor Road. == Design ==