Deep
(The Deep Submarium),
Hull
1998-2002
The £45.5 million Millennium Commission lottery scheme is one of Terry
Farrell and Partners' landmark projects. It comprises two buildings. The
visitor attraction, located at the south-west point of the site also houses the
Learning Centre, the Total Environment Simulator and the University of Hull's
research facility. The Business Centre, a simple linear structure close to the
site's western edge will help fund and contribute marine based research
to the educational part of the scheme.
A central objective was to create a building with a bold, pioneering image for
the city of Hull. The four-storey visitor attraction housing a world-class aquarium
exhibition is therefore designed to be a dramatic icon.
The Deep is a building that revels in its metaphorical associations. At an extreme
point in the landscape, the visitor attraction rises in a wave-like form, amplifying
the geography of the site and the oceanographic function of the building. The
exterior is treated as an eroded rock face using organic forms and lines, while
irregular recessed strata on the façades provide points of access and
openings for windows. The roof plane is treated similarly to the wall surfaces
so that the building is read as a three-dimensional object rather than as a series
of two-dimensional planes.
The Deep, which opened in 2002, is achieving great success as an attraction and
welcomed its one millionth visitor just 14 months after opening.
While the main mass of the building is treated as natural metaphor, two architectural
elements are placed within the composition. These are an observation point at
the form's pinnacle, with unrivalled views across the River Humber to the
great Humber Bridge, and an entrance lift, stair core and walkway that bridge
out of the main structure. The urban boundary of the site is marked by the business
centre, which offers highly flexible office space for young businesses and larger
spaces for established anchor tenants.
As Terry Farrell sees it, one of the great products of urban regeneration is
the knock-on effect that one development can have on a whole city – as
typified by the transformation of Bilbao since the building of the Guggenheim
museum in 1999. The Deep has been cited as a world class project, which has spearheaded
regeneration in the area and has put Hull and its people on the map.
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