Weston Library Building, University of Oxford Interior, Bodleian, English Architecture

Weston Library at Oxford University

University of Oxford Education Building Development, England – design by Wilkinson Eyre Architects

2 Jan 2017

Weston Library, University of Oxford

Design: Wilkinson Eyre Architects

Weston Library Shortlisted for Mies van der Rohe 2017 Awards

Mies van der Rohe 2017 Award Nominations

Weston Library, University of Oxford

Scott’s New Bodleian was designed as a storage facility for books with added curatorial accommodation. The building followed the typology of the Oxford quadrangle – albeit inverted so that the central ‘quad’ was fully occupied by an eleven storey bookstack, which did not meet modern archival standards for fire, environment, accessibility or distribution.

Weston Library at Oxford University

Photos © James Brittain

The quad is re-created as the Blackwell Hall with a clear new entrance on the principal frontage. Full height voids surround a floating volume over the court bringing in soft daylight, maintaining the quadrangle character which is vital to its architectural legibility.

The accommodation around the perimeter of the stack has been refurbished with special attention to the many heritage features still intact, providing exhibition galleries, reading rooms, seminar and research facilities and areas for conservation and curatorial activities. Over the public space there is a glazed open access book gallery, a visiting scholars’ centre and a new reading room with extraordinary views across the City. Other new facilities include a digital media centre, lecture theatre, shop and café.

Weston Library at Oxford University

Weston Library University of Oxford – Building Information

Name of work in English: Weston Library, University of Oxford
Placement: Nominee
Prize year: 2017
Location: Oxford, United Kingdom
Year completed: 2015 (Year began 2012)
Studio: Wilkinson Eyre Architects
Authors: Jim Eyre (1959 United Kingdom)

Weston Library Oxford University

Images © WilkinsonEyre

Collaborators
Construction manager: MACE
Engineering: Hurley Palmer Flatt
Quantity Surveyor: EC Harris
Fire consulting: Pell Frischmann
Structural engineering: Pell Frischmann
Others: Turnberry Consulting Project management: University of Oxford Estates Services and RBDML

Weston Library Oxford University

Weston Library Oxford University

Total area: 3,600
Usable floor area: Net Internal Area: 16,463m2 Gross Internal Area: 18,828m2
Cost: 4,865
Client: University of Oxford Estates Services
Client Type: private
Map: LatLng: (51.7549167, -1.2543505999999524)

Weston Library Oxford University

Weston Library Oxford University

page updated 5 Oct 2016

Weston Library Building at Oxford University

Design: Wilkinson Eyre, architects

Location: Broad Street, University of Oxford, England

Weston Library Shortlisted for Stirling Prize 2016

Weston Library at Oxford University Shortlisted for RIBA Stirling Prize 2016 – 14 Jul 2016

Wilkinson Eyre unveils University of Oxford’s Weston Library as world-class research centre

Oxford University’s Weston Library, home to some of the nation’s most valuable literary treasures, will reopen on 21st March 2015 following an £80m renovation by leading architectural practice Wilkinson Eyre. Part of the University’s world famous Bodleian Library, the Grade Il listed building (formerly the New Bodleian) was originally designed by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott in the 1930s.

Situated opposite Nicholas Hawksmoor’s iconic Clarendon Building and Christopher Wren’s exquisite Grade I listed Sheldonian Theatre, its renovation is at the heart of an ambitious period of renewal of the Bodleian’s facilities aimed at safeguarding its vast and unique collection of books and manuscripts.

Weston Library University of Oxford
photo : Ben Bisek

The much-anticipated project has created high-quality storage for the Libraries’ valuable special collections, which have been preserved for scholarship; developed the Libraries’ space for the support of advanced research; and has expanded public access to its great treasures via its new exhibition galleries and a lecture theater.

Weston Library at University of Oxford
photo : Ben Bisek

By opening up the building to promote its special collections to the wider public, Wilkinson Eyre has also addressed the building’s identity and related it more closely to its immediate context by improving its perception and approach. Once described as a ‘dinner jacket made of Harris Tweed’, the Weston Library is now successfully connected to the core Bodleian buildings.

The new Blackwell Hall, supported by a £5m donation from Julian Blackwell, is a publicly accessible, top-lit 13.5 metre high space which forms the heart of the new library and features a café, information desk, a 16th Century tapestry map (the Sheldon Tapestry) and a 15th Century gateway on permanent loan from the V&A Museum.

The gateway originally led to the garden of the historic Dorner family’s estate at Ascott Park in Oxfordshire and was the only surviving structure following a fire in 1662. With the support of Oxfordshire Buildings Trust, the incorporation of this gateway sees this grand piece of architecture returned to its original home county in a new and unique setting, emphasizing the theme of old and new that runs through the entire building.

Weston Library
photo : Ben Bisek

Blackwell Hall opens up to two new exhibition spaces and a café, creating an enticing proposition and welcoming experience for the general public, being directly accessible through the new public entrance on Broad Street.

Exhibition galleries have been added, along with other new facilities including a Digital Media Centre, a Visiting Scholars Centre, a lecture theatre, and a suite of seminar rooms to enable teaching and master-classes based on the library’s special collections. These facilitate contemporary research practices and techniques, supporting the library’s academic users, as well as enabling public interaction with the library’s collections and treasures.

The newly refurbished library includes world-class conservation workshops and facilities, where collections can be preserved in a secure and environmentally stable setting. The Bodleian’s Special Collections experts will now all be co-located in the building with their Conservation colleagues, as will the Centre for the Study of the Book.

Whilst carrying out the refurbishment and enhancement of this iconic library building, Wilkinson Eyre has addressed major challenges with its infrastructure and upgraded its facilities without compromising the building’s charming, historic character. Scott’s original design replicated the typology of an Oxford University college but with the traditional quadrangle space in the centre occupied by an 11-storey book stack based around a large complex of unprotected steel framework.

Weston Library at Oxford University
photo : Will Pryce

With the New Bodleian previously struggling to meet national standards for the storage and exhibition of archival documents, Wilkinson Eyre’s renovation has now provided a safe repository for the nation’s literary treasures. The architects have revised the layout, removing the upper floors of this colossal central stack, and replacing them with a dedicated reading room and suite equipped with the latest research facilities. The three- storey stacks underground have been partially rebuilt and upgraded to modern archival

standards, and for the first time, controlled shafts of daylight permeate into the heart of the building.

The highest storeys of Scott’s original building, hidden during the 1960s by an extension, have been re-instated and restored to include a new reading room boasting the best views of the city’s iconic spires. The slit windows arranged in rows, through which the spires are visible, are a signature Scott feature and a key expression of the building’s 1930s character. Scott was renowned for embracing modern building techniques and glazing in the building, including the slit windows, were the first large- scale use of anodised aluminium in the UK.

Weston Library Oxford University
photo : John Cairns

Particular care has been taken to restore and match Scott’s high-quality craftsmanship and original materials palette. From stone to metal to plaster, as well as joinery and furniture, Wilkinson Eyre’s attention to proportion, materiality and light in the new spaces gives rise to a quiet, scholarly gravitas emanating from this previously unloved building.

140 tonnes of salvaged stone was re-used in the new façades and external stonework — including two angels holding the University of Oxford coat of arms, and the bust of Bodleian Libraries’ founder Sir Thomas Bodley above the King George VI door — has been expertly cleaned and repaired. The ‘tour de force’ of original joinery is the main reading room, including a decorative, inlaid timber ceiling, which mimics Native American and African designs in a stylised Art Deco manner, and has been cleaned and restored to its original splendour. New bespoke additions such as shelving and tables have been designed and specified sympathetically

Weston Library at Oxford University images / information Received 230315

Wilkinson Eyre

A RIBA National Award Winner 2016 – 23 Jun 2016

Address: Broad Street, Oxford OX1 3BG, UK
Phone: 01865 277150

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