Walsall Art GalleryCivic Square


What do the British do well – build roads … This project makes a road into a pedestrian space using the materials of road construction.

The Art Gallery sits in a space that signifies a shift in scale from the low rise development and narrow streets of the town centre to the larger scale industrial spaces of the canal side. The design of the Art Gallery square unifies these two disparate landscapes.

Animation of the square occurs when it is occupied – people visiting the gallery, passing through, gathering to have a drink, parking their bikes or eating lunch – a space separate from but adjacent to the town centre. Objects on the square were located in a random way by casting pebbles onto the surface of the project model.

The design collaboration between KLA, Caruso St John and Richard Wentworth involved research focused on the inherent qualities of road surfacing. Two tonal extremes were picked from specialist ranges of asphalt to give the outsize stripes that identify the scheme concept –pedestrian symbol on a roadsurface.

The Art Gallery, Pub Café and canal side buildings sit upon this striped carpet, with the canal cut out of the carpet. The material refers to the language of vehicular spaces, but has been manipulated to glamorise it for pedestrian use.

18m tall galvanized steel lighting columns tower over the space and relate to the scale of the gallery, creating a large high volume of light which has a distinctively different quality and brightness to the lighting of the nearby streets. The lighting columns aid the shift in scale from the town centre streets to the larger scale of the industrial scale canal side.

1999–2001
Walsall, UK

Client

Walsall Art Gallery / Arts Council of England

Value

£0.5m

Architect

Caruso St John Architects

Artist

Richard Wentworth

Awards

2000 RIBA Award Winner
2000 RIBA Stirling Prize Finalist
2001 Mies van der Rohe Award Winner
2002 Civic Trust Award Winner



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What do the British do well – build roads … This project makes a road into a pedestrian space using the materials of road construction.

Kinnear Landscape Architects
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