Croft 3 Community Dining Hall / fardaa

Croft 3 Community Dining Hall / fardaa - Exterior Photography, Waterfront, CoastCroft 3 Community Dining Hall / fardaa - Exterior Photography, Windows, FacadeCroft 3 Community Dining Hall / fardaa - Interior Photography, Table, Wood, Chair, Beam, WindowsCroft 3 Community Dining Hall / fardaa - Interior Photography, Table, Windows, BeamCroft 3 Community Dining Hall / fardaa - More Images+ 22

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Croft 3 Community Dining Hall / fardaa - Exterior Photography, Waterfront, Coast
© David Barbour

Text description provided by the architects. A ruined basalt barn has been creatively repurposed as a dining hall and restaurant by London-based fardaa, providing a valued community resource for a coastal community. Croft 3 marks the first completed project by fardaa and embodies the studio’s approach to place, the economy of means, and social and environmental responsibility.

Croft 3 Community Dining Hall / fardaa - Exterior Photography
© David Barbour

Croft 3 is located on a coastal site on the Isle of Mull, overlooking the nearby island, Ulva across Loch Tuath bay. The remote Scottish isles are characterized by close-knit communities supported by tourism and small-scale farming known as Crofting. Client Jeanette Cutlack purchased a disused Croft on the island’s South in 2019 to expand her busy local restaurant, which previously operated out of a home kitchen. The restaurant sources all meat and fish from the island and makes the island's only commercially available haggis. Jeanette has plans to bring the croft back into use to directly supply the restaurant with meat and vegetables.

Croft 3 Community Dining Hall / fardaa - Exterior Photography, Windows, Facade
© David Barbour
Croft 3 Community Dining Hall / fardaa - Image 23 of 27
Site plan

Set low into the sloping plot, the development sees the adaptive reuse of a dilapidated stone barn into a dining hall, connected to a new timber-clad extension housing foyer, chef’s kitchen, and visitor facilities. Croft 3 is defined by two offset pitched volumes that echo the twin hillscape of Ulva across the bay, designed so neither is subservient to the other. The contrasting gables - one of stone, one of timber - take their cues from the local vernacular and offer a strong profile regardless of the direction of approach.

Croft 3 Community Dining Hall / fardaa - Interior Photography, Brick, Facade
© David Barbour
Croft 3 Community Dining Hall / fardaa - Interior Photography
© David Barbour

Visitors approach the restaurant from the road above and behind, the long black roofs of the building appearing lower than the sea and Ulva beyond. Descending to the entrance, the landscape becomes hidden from view as the building is accessed via a low, intimate foyer. From there one turns into a tall, light hallway, before turning again, through a deeply compressed doorway and into a grand dining room with spectacular views of the sea, bay, and islands beyond. This sequence of approach and entry is designed to heighten the sense of space and connection to the landscape beyond by first disassociating visitors from the scale and grandeur of the setting.

Croft 3 Community Dining Hall / fardaa - Exterior Photography, Windows, Waterfront
© David Barbour
Croft 3 Community Dining Hall / fardaa - Interior Photography, Windows
© David Barbour

The existing structure has been restored using lime mortar and salvaged basalt from the original stone structure. Overhead, an exposed timber ceiling of pine rafters and plywood adds a gentle warmth to the tall, open space. Heavily insulated to reduce heat loss, the thick building envelope is punctuated by existing and new openings. Windows and doors are set deep in the wall for the original apertures, preserving the appearance of punched openings, whilst new windows are flush with the external face to trace the form of the original building.

Croft 3 Community Dining Hall / fardaa - Interior Photography, Dining room, Chair, Beam, Windows
© David Barbour
Croft 3 Community Dining Hall / fardaa - Interior Photography, Table, Chair, Beam
© David Barbour

Croft 3’s interiors are defined by simple, raw materials. In the dining hall, American White Ash timber floors complement the soft salmon tones of raw plaster walls, a low-cost textural dining backdrop that catches light and changes throughout the day. Tall, white-painted skirting and door surrounds contrast with these more varied tones and provides robust surfaces in high-traffic areas. The dining room is furnished with reclaimed french cafe chairs and brewers' benches and long, communal dining tables made on the island from a single douglas fir.

Croft 3 Community Dining Hall / fardaa - Image 24 of 27
Floor paln

Two solid stone pylons at the southwest and northeast corners of the timber-clad extension act as anchors for the new kitchen and entrance, strengthening a datum relating to the existing stone doorway and further extending to new windows, doors, and eaves.

Croft 3 Community Dining Hall / fardaa - Interior Photography, Table, Windows, Wood, Beam
© David Barbour

fardaa designed Croft 3 to enhance the grand setting, taking cues from the close-coupled massing of traditional island farmsteads, whilst opening up the interior to spectacular distant views. The dining hall was completed in October 2022, and highlights the new studio's capability to design contextual, sustainable architecture that values and enhances community and culture.

Croft 3 Community Dining Hall / fardaa - Exterior Photography, Windows
© David Barbour

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Project location

Address:Isle of Mull, United Kingdom

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Location to be used only as a reference. It could indicate city/country but not exact address.
About this office
Cite: "Croft 3 Community Dining Hall / fardaa" 02 Apr 2023. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/998817/croft-3-community-dining-hall-fardaa> ISSN 0719-8884

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