Justine Simons OBE, Deputy Mayor for Culture and the Creative Industries, cut the ribbon to officially launch Chiswick House & Gardens Trust’s brand-new affordable artist studios, part of the Trust’s wider Community & Creative Campus, on Thursday 22 May.
Twenty new artist and maker studios have been created in historic outbuildings set around the tranquil beauty of the site’s Kitchen Garden, and the Trust will be welcoming artists and makers taking up residence in early summer.
Developed in partnership with the charity Artist Studio Company, the studios will provide affordable creative workspace for up to 50 London-based artists and makers.
The Creative Campus is part of a landmark £6.4million redevelopment project at the historic 65-acre West London gardens, which will see the transformation of previously underused areas of the estate into new indoor and outdoor spaces for the whole community.
The Studios form part of this ongoing project, designed to support Chiswick House & Gardens Trust’s existing community work and cement the Trust’s place as a thriving hub for engagement, education, and creative enterprise. Future plans include the launch of a new Schools Programme and Learning Hub and, in 2026, the transformation of a disused 17th century walled garden into a Community Fruit Garden.
The Trust, which is based in the Mayor of London’s Hounslow Creative Enterprise Zone, has already secured over £4.4million of the £6.4million budget for the Community & Creative Campus, including £180,00 from the Mayor’s £1.2m Creative Enterprise Zone Sustainability Capital Grant. This funding has been used to support greater energy efficiency and long-term sustainability for the studios, with one key element of this being the installation of an Air Source Heat Pump, which will also be used to heat other key buildings in the full campus.
The project directly responds to a growing demand for accessible workspaces across London, where 67% of affordable creative spaces have closed since 2014.
In addition to providing much needed affordable workspaces for local and London-based artist-makers, fostering a new creative community, income from the studios will also help Chiswick House & Gardens Trust secure its own future and continue its vital community work and keep its beautiful gardens open for all for decades to come.
The studios, and the wider Community and Creative Campus of which they form a part, have been made possible by generous support from a range of funders including the Mayor of London’s Creative Enterprise Zone, London Borough of Hounslow, The Linbury Trust, Wolfson Foundation, Garfield Weston Foundation, Kusuma Trust, Clore Duffield Foundation, Foyle Foundation, the Swire Charitable Trust, Bernard Sunley Foundation, the Architectural Heritage Fund and many generous individuals.
Justine Simons OBE, Deputy Mayor for Culture and the Creative Industries, said:
“I am delighted to open these wonderful new studios at Chiswick House & Gardens. They will provide much-needed affordable creative workspace to local artists and help to foster a new creative community as these historic outbuildings come alive with excitement and inspiration. It’s an important milestone in the delivery of the Mayor’s Creative Enterprise Zones which are helping to build a better London for everyone.”