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Manchester School of Art

Manchester

Project Details

£10m to £49.99M

New Build, Alteration to existing property

Practice

*Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios LLP

Bath Brewery , Toll Bridge Road , Batheaston , BATH , Somerset , BA1 7DE , United Kingdom

This major extension to the Manchester School of Art, which began life in the 1830s, has provided an engaging and lively environment for students and staff to work and study and has helped re-assert both the Art School and the University’s profile on the national stage. A highly visible new Vertical Gallery space acts as a shop window providing a showcase for the School of Art to the University and the wider City. Behind the gallery is an interactive ‘hybrid’ studio designed to break down traditional hierarchies and foster creative collaboration between disciplines instead. Manchester School of Art is one of the oldest institutions of its kind in the UK: one of its most famous students being L S Lowry. The school was established in the 19th Century to help keep the region competitive in an international market and support regional industry in a wider marketplace. This remains an important objective for the Art School, and a key part of the brief was to help it bridge the gap between education and professional life. Our approach was to express a modern interpretation of the traditional warehouse typology which made Manchester such a success through its textile trade in the 19th century. The new build element of the project comprises two key elements. The first is the working heart of the building comprising open studios, workshops and teaching spaces known as the Design Shed. The second is the seven-storey Vertical Gallery - the link between the existing 1960s arts tower and the new studio building. This gallery provides a showcase space for students’ creations and a shop window for the faculty itself. The aim of the new building is to celebrate the commonalities of the various art and design disciplines and encourage students to work alongside each other and enjoy the crossover in an open, terraced hybrid environment, rather than working in the silos common to many art and design establishments. With its vast glazed façade, it is also a building that proudly showcases its students’ work to all who pass by: a ‘Window on the Arts’.