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Brockholes Wetland and Woodland Nature Reserve Building, Image, Architect
Brockholes Nature Reserve Competition Winner
Building Proposal, Lancashire, England, UK
Brockholes Wetland and Woodland Nature Reserve Visitor Facilities,
nr Preston
2008-
Adam Khan Architects
RIBA competition winner
Brockholes Wetland and Woodland Nature Reserve Visitor Facilities
: Winner
Feb 2008

Adam Khan Architects has won the RIBA competition to design a new
visitor facility for the Brockholes Wetland and Woodland Nature Reserve
near Preston in Lancashire.
The vision for Brockholes was to design a suite of visitor facilities
to inspire and encourage people to visit the site and engage with
the natural world. The project is being developed as part of the North
West Regional Development Agencys £59 million Newlands
land regeneration scheme in partnership with the Forestry Commission.
The facilities will include a café, shop, gallery, education,
and meeting rooms.
The competition was open and judged anonymously in the first stage
with five teams then selected to give a presentation to the jury panel
in November 2007. Following these interviews three teams were chosen
to attend a final interview in February with the Lancashire Wildlife
Trust and the commercial partners. Adam Khan architects were chosen
above McDowell + Benedetti Architects and AY Architects as winners
of the competition.
The winning design has been named A Floating World and
draws on the rich tradition of wetland dwellings, a floating world
of thatch, reeds and willow.
Recalling the Marsh Arabs of southern Iraq, neolithic settlements
of Northern Europe, and the fabulous towering constructions of storks
and herons. An island of pontoons gives unlimited flood protection,
and brings the visitor straight to the very special environment of
the wetlands; among the reed-beds at the waters edge.
The project is zero-carbon in both use and production, with materials
of low embodied energy - thatch, willow, timber, off-site prefabrication
and on-site energy generation and waste treatment.
Ian Selby, Brockholes Project Manager said: We are all very
excited about the design and cant wait for the vision to be
realised on site and the public to be able to enjoy this wonderful
resource.
On his win, Adam Khan commented : This is such a dream project
for us: as well as the chance to make a unique, poetic landscape,
were really excited by the potential of the project to make
sustainability crossover into the mainstream - by enticing and
delighting, by demonstrating how interesting and how beautiful it
could be to rise to the challenges facing us all.
The winning team will now work closely with the Lancashire Wildlife
Trust, the North West Regional Development Agency and the Forestry
Commission to progress the winning concept.
Lancashire building
Brockholes Nature Reserve Visitor Facilities - Design Team
Adam Khan Architects team:
Adam Khan, Timo Keller, Giovanni Petroliti
+consultants:
Hareth Pochee (Max Fordham engineers)
Paul Toplis (Price&Myers engineers)
Alan Tovey, Richard Collis (Jackson Coles)
Martin Gamble, Jason Waddy (Mouchel Parkmann)
Brockholes Nature Reserve
Brockholes is a Lancashire Wildlife Trust-owned site, which was purchased
under the Newlands scheme in December 2006, with additional support
from the Tubney Trust and Lancashire Wildlife Trust member donations.
Brockholes will be transformed through a unique partnership of the
Wildlife Trust for Lancashire, Manchester and North Merseyside, Northwest
Regional Development Agency (NWDA) and Forestry Commission.
The Wildlife Trust for Lancashire, Manchester and North Merseyside
is registered as Lancashire Wildlife Trust (LWT), as a Registered
Charity number 229325 and a Company limited by guarantee number 731548.
LWT is dedicated to the protection and promotion of the wildlife in
Lancashire, seven boroughs of Greater Manchester and four of Merseyside,
all lying North of the River Mersey.
Newlands stands for New Economic Woodlands. Launched in the summer
of 2003, Newlands is a unique £59 million scheme that is reclaiming
large areas of derelict, underused and neglected (DUN) land across
Englands Northwest, transforming them into thriving, durable,
community woodlands. It is the 21st Century face of land regeneration:
carefully planned; intelligence-led; delivering widespread public
benefits; enhancing the environment; and delivered through partnerships,
most crucially that between the Northwest Regional Development Agency
and the Forestry Commission. Commitment of funding for the 20-year
scheme has been secured from the partnership that is supporting Newlands.
The Northwest Regional Development Agency (NWDA) has approved £59million
in total for investment in the Newlands programme.
LWT provides protection for endangered species, owns and manages nature
reserves, educates and inspires children to carry on the work, offers
opportunities for people to volunteer in worthwhile conservation projects
and campaigns at every level of government.
LWT manages 34 Nature Reserves covering 2000 acres of woodland, wetland,
upland and meadow.
LWT welcomed nearly 7000 children to our Education Centres last year
and they went away with an enthusiasm to help save wildlife.
LWT is involved with numerous community projects and provides specialist
training for environmental volunteers.
LWT protects urban wildlife by creating green spaces in towns and
promoting sustainable lifestyles.
LWT works with Local Authorities, influencing the decision makers
and resisting developments that would damage wildlife habitat.
The Wildlife Trust for Lancashire, Manchester and North Merseyside,
The Barn, Berkeley Drive, Bamber Bridge, Preston, PR5 6BY.
Tel: 01772 324129
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Brockholes Nature Reserve Competition - page
: adrian welch / isabelle lomholt |
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