International Centre
for Life, Newcastle
1996 - 1999
The concept for the International Centre for Life (ICL) emerged out
of Newcastle University's pre-eminence in the field of genetic
research. The £60m Landmark Millennium scheme combines a new
block for the university's genetics department; a Bioscience
Centre with office/laboratory space for private sector bio-technology
companies; a visitor attraction designed to inform the public about
genetics and the story of DNA; and Times Square, Newcastle's
first new public square for over a century. Having already created
the masterplan for Newcastle's East Quayside, Terry Farrell
and Partners, prepared a series of urban design studies for the area
around Newcastle Central Station. The creation of these 'urban
villages', led to a competition in 1996, which TFP won. The
Bioscience Centre opened in 1998, at the same time as TFP received
the brief for the other components of the scheme – in this sense
the practice set the agenda for the project before knowing the full
brief.
ICL eschews any single design approach. From the beginning, the curved
layout of the complex appeared to resemble an embryo. An image that
recalled the early stages of biological growth seemed a fitting motif
for a 'centre for life' and for the regeneration of a
derelict urban quarter. Planned around a robust and flexible collage
of buildings, the focus of attention at the heart of the scheme is
the pedestrianised Times Square.
Architecturally, the 'face' of the masterplan is the freeform
pre-patinated copper roof of the LIFE Interactive World exhibition
gallery. The roof shape derives from the structure and complex geometries
of a leaf – a fitting motif for a scheme celebrating life itself.
Its structural system results in a constantly changing sectional form
that is one of the most complex geometrical roof shapes yet created
in timber and steel. The 'black box' component of LIFE
Interactive World contains multi-media displays and is designed out
of profile metal with servicing on its flat roof: as it faces the
railway, its box-like industrial aesthetic is fitting. The 'ski
slope' links the Institute of Human Genetics to the single-storey
visitor attraction 'black box', setting in motion a spiral
that cascades down to the lowest curve of the visitor attraction.
Contrasting with the exuberance of the visitor attraction, the Bioscience
Centre is an economic, functional building faced in sandstone and,
on the street elevation, render and glass blocks.
The architectural design of the complex responds to its context, while
creating sufficient coherence and identity to establish a new quarter.
ICL is a landmark urban regeneration project that celebrates and revives
elements of Newcastle's past. The architecture and urban planning
actively promotes renewal, evolution and development, thereby mirroring
the life-giving function of the site.
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