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23 Jan 2009
dRMM have won a limited competition to develop the Brunel Museum in Rotherhithe,
South London.
Brunel Museum invited six architects to come up with strategies for its
site in Southwark. Along with ideas for the development of the existing
museum, the special challenge was to make accessible (for the first time
since 1865) the 50ft diameter vent shaft and former stairwell to the Thames
Tunnel.

dRMM's phased strategy includes creating better public realm around the
museum, building a spiral cylinder in the airspace above the subterranean
shaft as new museum space, and providing a suspended mobile platform as
a programmable public access staging to all levels, old and new.
dRMM Director Alex de Rijke said, “dRMM’s proposal consists of several
ambitious sitespecific responses, inspired by the Brunel legacy of inventive
lateral design. We also believe that temporary architecture can create
long-term benefits. Look at Brunel’s economic yet spectacular timber viaducts
for Cornwall, for example. They enabled Londoners to see the sea, locals
to escape poverty, and lasted for over 80 years.”
Brunel Museum competition judges included Chair of the Trust engineer
Bryn Bird, Museum Director Robert Hulse, Trustee Molly Lowell and Patron
Piers Gough of CZWG Architects LLP. The decision to choose dRMM was unanimous.
Piers Gough concluded, “The Brunel Museum chose dRMM ahead of their rivals
due to their clever grasp of the situation and its opportunities, coupled
with their own technologically imaginative passion”.
London Architects
dRMM
Alex de Rijke, Philip Marsh and Sadie Morgan founded dRMM, a London-based
studio of international architects and designers, in 1995.
dRMM : Practice Information
The Brunel Museum
The Brunel Museum celebrates the lives and work of two of the greatest
engineers
Britain has seen: Marc and Isambard Kingdom Brunel. What better place
for a Brunel
museum than above the Thames Tunnel - the only project that father and
son worked on together. In 1825 they began the first tunnel to be built
with a tunnelling shield and
pioneered a method for building tube systems still in use today. The Thames
Tunnel is the oldest tunnel in the London Underground and carries a railway
under the River
Thames over 180 years after work started on it. (The East London Line
has now closed although this is only as refurbishment for it to become
a part of the new London Overground system.) Exhibits arranged over two
floors commemorate Brunel's first and last projects: the Thames Tunnel
as birthplace of the tube system and the Great Eastern Steamship as the
first modern ocean liner. A well-stocked souvenir shop holds reminders
for everyone from children to the most dedicated armchair engineers.
London Architecture
Design Competitions
Brunel University London
World Architecture : e-architect
- a guide to key buildings across the globe
Comments / photos for the Brunel Museum Competition London Architecture
page welcome: info@e-architect.co.uk
Brunel Museum Competition
- page: adrian welch / isabelle lomholt
Website : www.brunel-museum.org.uk
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