New studio is under construction for Barnet Guild of Artists in a field that was once part of Whalebones farm and estate

5 Mar 2026
Written by Nick Jones

Work has started on foundations for a new studio which is being built for the Barnet Guild of Artists as part of the housing development which is underway in the Whalebones fields and woodland off Wood Street, Barnet.

A new building for community use was included in the go-ahead for an estate of 112 homes which is under construction by Hill Residential.

The new artists’ studio will be in Wellhouse Lane, directly opposite Barnet Hospital car park and bus terminus.

It replaces a studio bequeathed for the guild’s use by the late Gwyneth Cowing, former owner of Whalebones House, who was granddaughter of the founder of the Barnet Press and who died in 1987.

Hill Residential completed purchase of the Whalebones woods and fields after planning approval was finally granted in late 2024 following a protracted campaign by objectors who included the Barnet Society and the former Chipping Barnet MP Theresa Villiers.

They argued that the new housing estate would destroy a significant wildlife habitat and result in the loss of the last remaining farmland between Arkley and High Barnet.

Most of the new homes are to be built in the largest of the fields opposite the Arkley public house, between the Elmbank estate and the woods around the now privately owned Whalebones House.

The land falls away to Wellhouse Lane and in the lower part of the development there will be three six-storey blocks providing 70 flats.

In the upper part of the site, facing Wood Street, there will be 42 new houses.

Martyn Jelley, senior site manager, told a residents’ consultation meeting that the whole scheme is due to be completed in by the end of 2028. The first new homes could be ready to move in by the end of 2027.

He said Hill Residential had taken great care to save as much of the woodland as possible and there was only one additional tree to be felled and a decision on that was being left until the spring for the result of a survey to see if the tree is being used as a roost for bats.

Work has started on new studio for Barnet Guild of Artists on farmland at Whalebone as part of residential development to provide 112 new homes

Nearby residents were shown visualisations of houses on the new estate at a consultation meeting.

A start on the construction of the new artists’ studio in Wellhouse Lane was welcomed by Helen Leake, secretary and treasury of the guild of artists.

While waiting for the new building to be completed, guild members would continue to use the timber-framed studio which was built by Miss Cowing, and which will eventually be demolished to make way for new houses.

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