DETAILS
CLIENT: UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD
LOCATION: OXFORD, UK
COST: £50M
DATE: 2009
SERVICES
BUILDING SERVICES DESIGN
ENERGY ANALYSIS
LIGHTING DESIGN
CFD MODELLING
DAYLIGHTING ANALYSIS
FAÇADE OPTIMISATION
ENVIRONMENTAL DESIGN
AWARDS
2010 RIBA Award
2011 Civic Trust Award
Strategy
The newly finished extension and renovation of the Museum doubles the overall floor area and increases Gallery space by 50%. The impact is two-fold: it allows a larger part of the museum’s collection to be on display and improves the back-of-house facilities, including conservation workshops and the provision of improved archive space.
The height of the new extension was strictly governed by the height of the existing listed buildings which surround it. In order to maximise floor to ceiling height in the galleries, a solution was devised which pulled the services away from the ceilings and into the walls, a design that became known as ‘fat-walls’. Ventilation to the galleries is provided from top floor plant rooms with supply and extract ducts dropping vertically down the fat walls.
The renovation also includes the complete replacement of electrical, security and telecommunications systems.
The Ashmolean Museum of Art & Archaeology
Rick Mather Architects
Profile in the Guardian Newspaper