St Mary Redcliffe Competition Winner, Bristol Community Centre Building, Purcell, Design Contest
St Mary Redcliffe Competition Winner
Winning Design for Visitor and Community Centre Design Contest in Southwest England, UK
2 Jun 2016
St Mary Redcliffe Architecture Competition Winner
St Mary Redcliffe Design Competition Winner
St Mary Redcliffe announced today (June 2, 2016) that Purcell has won the St Mary Redcliffe Design Competition.
This architecture competition attracted a strong response and the other four award-winning finalists included leading UK practices:
– Carmody Groarke
– dRMM
– Eric Parry Architects
– Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios
The Reverend Dan Tyndall, Vicar of St Mary Redcliffe, said:
“The Jury was very impressed by the finalists’ presentations, their enthusiasm and good ideas, but ultimately, Purcell demonstrated the deepest understanding of the site and context and the opportunity at St Mary Redcliffe.
We found their scheme to be crisp, integrated and compelling. A particular strength was the dispersal of accommodation across three locations, helping to tie the disparate northern and southern parts of Redcliffe together.”
photograph : Emily Whitfield-Wicks
David Hamilton, Director of Projects for competition organisers, Malcolm Reading Consultants, said:
“We were all impressed by the quality of work that each shortlisted finalist presented to the Jury. But Purcell demonstrated that they were the best team to guide the church through the development of the design and delivery of the project.”
Dan Talkes, Senior Architect at Purcell, said;
“Purcell is delighted to work with St Mary Redcliffe. For the church, this project represents a once-in- a-lifetime opportunity to repair the fault lines that exist in Redcliffe’s urban fabric and, in doing so, to position the church at the physical, spiritual and social heart of the city.
St Mary Redcliffe Competition-winning design by Purcell:
Our proposal, generated from a ‘stitch’ of interconnected buildings, re-establishes the church’s medieval enclosure and creates a new, permeable edge to the church grounds that will improve public access.”
The Grade I listed Bristol church, both a national landmark and a living church, is the equivalent of many European cathedrals and one of the largest parish churches in England. The £12-15m development project will give the church much needed visitor amenities, step-free access, and a community hub on a separate site or sites in the heart of the Redcliffe area. The initiative is linked to wider regeneration plans, placing the church at the heart of a new urban village within the city centre.
image from commons.wikimedia.org
The concept design images can be viewed on the competition website.
Fifty-three practices entered the competition and of these international studios accounted for nearly twenty per cent. The competition jury included journalist, broadcaster and author Simon Jenkins; Bristol-based contemporary artist Luke Jerram, who was responsible for the Park and Slide installation which turned Bristol’s Park Street into a giant water slide; and Vicky Smith, the new city design manager for Bristol.
St Mary Redcliffe is notable for its connection with many important historical figures, including George Frederick Handel and Samuel Taylor Coleridge. It has links with America through artefacts relating to John Cabot’s voyage of 1497 and Admiral Penn – the latter, the namesake of Pennsylvania, is buried within the church.
Elizabeth I described St Mary Redcliffe as ‘the fairest, goodliest and most famous parish church in England’. The church attracts tens of thousands of visitors and tourists annually. Built, and then re- built, over a 300-year period from the early 13th century to the 15th century, the church embodies magnificence, but has always lacked sufficient community and support spaces for its vital work in one of the most deprived wards in the country.
26 + 21 Apr 2016
St Mary Redcliffe Architecture Competition Images
St Mary Redcliffe Design Competition Images
St Mary Redcliffe released images of the shortlisted concept designs produced by the five award-winning design teams competing to win the St Mary Redcliffe Design Competition.
St Mary Redcliffe Competition Shortlist
Finalist teams with design images:-
13 Feb 2016
St Mary Redcliffe Architecture Competition Bristol
St Mary Redcliffe Design Competition Shortlist
Location: Redcliffe, Bristol, England, UK
Fifty-three architecture practices entered the competition and of these international studios accounted for nearly 20%. The decision of the selection panel which included representatives of the jury, St Mary Redcliffe and competition organisers, Malcolm Reading Consultants was unanimous.
St Mary Redcliffe Design Competition
The competition is being run in accordance with European Union procurement guidelines under the Restricted Procedure. The competition jury includes journalist, broadcaster and author Simon Jenkins, and Bristol-based contemporary artist Luke Jerram, who was responsible for the Park and Slide installation, which last year turned Bristol’s Park Street into a giant water slide. Malcolm Reading will advise the jury.
The competition has a dedicated website at:
http://competitions.malcolmreading.co.uk/stmaryredcliffe
St Mary Redcliffe
The Christian community has worshipped continuously on the site occupied by St Mary Redcliffe Church for nearly 900 years. The first church here was built in the early 12th century. The present church is a treasure of international importance. A Grade I listed building that is a masterpiece of Gothic architecture – a wall of glass surmounted by a roof of glittering gilded roof bosses of exquisite beauty, elegant 18th century ironwork, carved wood and stone, all framed by light flooding in through vast clerestory and stained glass windows.
The oldest parts of the present building date from 1185 although most of the nave, transepts and choir was created by highly skilled yet unrecorded stonemasons in the 14th century.
The building’s floor plan is the traditional cruciform shape – symbolic of the cross used for crucifixion, the Roman method of execution by which Jesus Christ died. The physical location is fundamental to the historic maritime and mercantile importance of Bristol generally and the district of Redcliffe in particular.
To the north side of the church lies the line of the medieval Portwall, to the west the quayside and harbour plus the red coloured sandstone cliffs from which the area derives its name. Indeed the church’s boundaries to west, south and east have remained fundamentally unchanged from its medieval plan. All of this makes the location itself of both national and regional significance.
stmaryredcliffe.co.uk
Malcolm Reading Consultants
London-based Malcolm Reading Consultants (MRC) is a strategic architectural consultancy which specialises in the selection of contemporary designers. MRC believes in the power of design to create new perceptions and act as an inspiration – whether at the local level, or internationally.
The consultancy offers a service to find the very best designers for clients with capital projects, whether through open-international, or private-invited competitions. Recent competitions include those for the Guggenheim Helsinki, the Art Mill, Qatar, Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park’s Culture & Education Quarter, the Mumbai City Museum, the gold medal-winning UK Pavilion at Milan Expo 2015 and New College, Oxford.
malcolmreading.co.uk
St Mary Redcliffe church status: Grade I-listed
Deadline for expressions of interest: 15 Jan 2016
St Mary Redcliffe Competition Bristol Building images / information Malcolm Reading Consultants
Website: Bristol
Anglican parish church
Address: 12 Colston Parade, Avon, Bristol BS1 6RA
Phone: 0117 929 1487
13 Feb 2016
St Mary Redcliffe Bristol : Symposium news
“Hear new thinking on issues surrounding the design and construction of new buildings on historically important sites. This symposium is recognised by the Institute of Historic Building Conservation (IHBC) for CPD.”
Website: St Mary Redcliffe church Bristol
Website: St Mary Redcliffe Design Competition Winner – MRC announcement
Location: St Mary Redcliffe, 12 Colston Parade, Avon, Bristol BS1 6RA, UK
Bristol Architecture
Bristol Architecture Design – chronological list
Bristol Metropolitan College Building
Design : Wilkinson Eyre Architects
image courtesy of architects
Bristol Metropolitan College Building
Website: St Mary Redcliffe church
Victoria Transport Interchange
Comments / photos for the St Mary Redcliffe Competition Bristol page welcome
Website: Bristol