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CASE STUDY
1 Haworth Tompkins Bristol Old Vic
2 Preston New Market Hall, John Bridge
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Materials and Viewing Platform
Source: https://www.haworthtompkins.com/work/bristol-old-vic
- Mezzanine galleries, winding timber staircases and viewing platforms allow the entire audience to move up, down and around a single, convivial space before and after each show, and the local community to enjoy the foyer throughout the day as a café, bar and meeting place.
4 UAL Campus
Market
Source: https://www.fwpgroup.co.uk/job/preston-market-hall/
- Preston City Council is providing investment for the redevelopment of the Markets Quarter. Frank Whittle Partnership has led the restoration of the historic fish market canopy and the main outdoor market canopy. The listed structures have both undergone extensive refurbishment restoring them to their former glory. The new outdoor market space also doubles up as a year-round events space with demountable market stalls.
How new building combined with existing building Indoors view Old and new
Source:https://www.dezeen.com/2016/10/06/caruso-st-john-wins-stirling-prize-2016-damien-hirst-newport-street-gallery/
- Stretching along an entire street, the gallery occupies three century-old red brick warehouses – originally used for theatre carpentry and scenery production – and two new brick structures, including one with a spiky sawtooth roof.
- "Caruso St John's approach to conservation is irreverent yet sensitive and achieves a clever solution that expresses a poetic juxtaposition of old and new. "
- "Internally, the five buildings are connected as a continuous and coherent sequence of light filled gallery spaces. The simple and logical circulation is enlivened by exquisitely detailed and sensuous staircases."
Source:https://www.stantonwilliams.com/projects/ual-campus-for-central-saint-martins-at-kings-cross/
- The design combines the 19th century Grade II listed Granary building and transit sheds – with a 200 metre long new building that uses industrial materials and creates robust spaces for the students, full of natural light. An internal street draws daylight in and acts as a central circulation spine with suspended walkways, cafes, film, graphic and light projections. The spaces are designed to be flexible and ‘raw’, to allow the different departments within the college to develop their own identities, whilst maintaining the integrity of the buildings as a whole.
- Performance spaces including two theatres and dance studios are designed alongside exhibition areas, a roof garden, bar and ticketing area.
Source: https://www.lan-opc.org.uk/Atherton/pits.html