Whitworth Art Gallery, Design Competition Manchester, Building, News, UK, Contest
Whitworth Art Gallery Competition Manchester
Arts Building Development in northwest England – design by MUMA, architects
6 Nov 2009
Whitworth Manchester
Architect Selected for Whitworth’s Building Designs
MUMA has been selected as the architectural practice who will shape the Whitworth Art Gallery’s vision for the future. The practice won this opportunity through a RIBA architectural competition held following Whitworth’s award of a first-round pass from the Heritage Lottery Fund, in February 2009. An initial field of over 130 competition entrants was narrowed to a shortlist of five firms that each submitted detailed designs. These were subject to public scrutiny as well as being considered in depth by the judging panel chaired by Chancellor of the University of Manchester, Tom Bloxham M.B.E.
Whitworth Art Gallery – Next steps
MUMA will now work with the Whitworth on a detailed design of a new second entrance and extension for the gallery, connecting it more directly with Whitworth Park in which it is situated at the southern gateway of the University of Manchester campus. Plans for the development include an art garden and second entrance, a new informal ‘cafe in the trees’, a landscape gallery and and study area allowing visitors and researchers to get closer to the collections even when they are not on public display. Plans will be worked up during the next year and will be presented as part of the final stage of the Whitworth’s Heritage Lottery Fund bid in 2010.
About the winning design
Upon the selection of this design, chair of the judging panel Tom Bloxham M.B.E. said “all the shortlisted designs were outstanding and had unique strengths, however MUMA’s design shone in its thoughtful and sensitive response to a complex brief. Amongst many delightful touches the prospect of visiting a cafe in the tree canopy was particularly enjoyed, along with many further connections between gallery and surrounding park landscape. MUMA demonstrated care not only in the development of new designs but also in their consideration of improvements to the existing building.”
The winning design takes inspiration from the words of an earlier director of the Whitworth, Margaret Pilkington: “I have come to the conclusion that a good museum or gallery should be a place where people feel comfortable. If it stands in a garden or park, the visitors should be able to enjoy the beauty of the outdoors as a counterpoint to what is within”. An art garden and second entrance is framed by two new wings; a landscape gallery to the north gives an urban edge to the garden, and a more transparent, slender wing of the café celebrates the park’s spectacular avenue of trees to the south. A lower ground floor provides new education facilities and improved access to the collection, with a new study centre and an art workshop opening into the Art Garden – a setting for art and events. Openings are created in the existing gallery providing the heart of the building with new views and contact with Whitworth Park. Transparency invites the passer by to explore further. A new promenade wraps the existing galleries and again makes the most of the gallery’s connection with the park.
About the Architect
MUMA (McInnes, Usher, McKnight Architects) is a collaborative architectural design studio established in 2000. The principals of MUMA met when they studied together at the Mackintosh School of Architecture and prior to establishing MUMA, they worked together gaining a background in prestigious civic and arts buildings. MUMA has recently completed the extension and refurbishment of the original Newlyn Art Gallery and the conversion of a redundant telephone exchange in Penzance, into ‘The Exchange’, a new contemporary art gallery, the re-design of the
restaurant at the Royal Academy of Arts in London and the new restaurant and café for the Victoria & Albert Museum in London. Currently MUMA’s foremost public project is the new £30m Medieval & Renaissance Galleries for the Victoria & Albert Museum in London which opens 2nd December 2009. All of MUMA’s work has been secured through architectural design competitions and their projects have received international awards and recognition.
About the Whitworth
Holding over 50,000 objects within nationally significant collections of art and design the Whitworth Art Gallery has been part of the cultural landscape of Manchester since 1889, when it was created as the first English gallery in a park. For the enjoyment and inspiration of Manchester’s fast-growing population, the gallery’s aim was to provide “a source of perpetual gratification to the people of Manchester & and cultivate taste and knowledge of the Fine Arts of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture”. Today, the gallery acts as a cultural gateway to the south of the city for local communities and for university staff and students. The gallery is visited by over
140,000 people a year, from local families to international tourists.
Whitworth Art Gallery Competition : Further Information
Whitworth Art Gallery Competition Shortlist
Amanda Levete Architects
Edward Cullinan Architects
Haworth Tompkins
MUMA
Stanton Williams
Existing Whitworth Art Gallery Building:
photo : Whitworth Art Gallery
Whitworth Art Gallery – Information
Entry to The Whitworth Art Gallery is free
The Whitworth is open Monday to Saturday 10am-5pm, Sunday 12-4pm
www.manchester.ac.uk/whitworth
Telephone 0161 275 7450
The Whitworth Art Gallery is part of The University of Manchester and has been awarded Designated status by the UK Government. It is internationally renowned for its collections of wallpapers, textiles, watercolours, prints, drawings, modern art and sculpture.
The Heritage Lottery Fund awarded the Whitworth Gallery a first-round pass award in February 2009, including a grant of £152,000 to contribute towards the costs of developing proposals for a new extension to the gallery. The Heritage Lottery Fund will continue to support and work closely with the Whitworth Gallery throughout the project’s development phase.
Using money raised through the National Lottery, the Heritage Lottery Fund (HLF) sustains and transforms a wide range of heritage for present and future generations to take part in, learn from and enjoy. From museums, parks and historic places to archaeology, natural environment and cultural traditions, we invest in every part of our diverse heritage. HLF has supported more than 28,800 projects, allocating over £4.3billion across the UK.
Whitworth Art Gallery Competition image / information from RIBA
Whitworth Art Gallery Reopening
Location: Whitworth Art Gallery, Oxford Road, Manchester, Lancashire M15 6ER, Northwest England, UK
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Website: www.whitworth.manchester.ac.uk