Turner Contemporary | David Chipperfield Architects

Margate / United Kingdom / 2011

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4 Love 684 Visits Published

Turner Contemporary is a new gallery in Margate on the north coast of Kent. Its name was inspired by the town’s association with the English painter JMW Turner, who exclaimed, ‘… the skies over Thanet [the north-eastern tip of Kent] are the loveliest in all Europe’. The gallery is located on a prominent seafront, previously a car park, where a guesthouse frequented by Turner once stood.


The new two-storey building is designed to maximise both the dramatic setting between sea and land and the extraordinary light conditions unique to this area that inspired Turner well over a century ago. It is composed of six identical crystalline volumes with monopitched roofs providing north light to the gallery spaces and revealing daily and seasonal light changes. Turner Contemporary offers spectacular views to the sea, connecting visitors to the broader landscape whilst encouraging a sense of participation in the community. The gallery is visible from the railway station across the sandy beach and forms a focal point on the horizon. As the seafront is occasionally flooded, the building has been raised on a plinth and its immediate surroundings provided with a hard landscape.


The public gallery, which has no permanent collection, presents both historic and contemporary works as well as a programme of educational and cultural events with a broad community appeal. The ground-floor spaces include a reception area, a flexible event space and a cafeteria – all of which can operate independently from the climate-controlled exhibition spaces occupying the upper floor. Direct daylight enters the building from the clerestory windows on the north side and diffused sunlight from the skylights above each of the six volumes.


The building is constructed with a concrete frame and acid-etched glass skin. The envelope has to withstand the corrosive nature of the sea, high humidity levels, strong winds and the occasional wave overtopping the building. The façades are primarily of glass with reinforced windows. Internally, the material palette is reduced to hard-wearing screed floors and dry lining to facilitate the hanging of changing exhibitions.


Date: 2006-2011
Gross floor area: 3,100 m²
Client: Kent County Council
Architect: David Chipperfield Architects, London
Director: Franz Borho
Project architects: Holger Mattes, Caroline Rogerson
Landscape architect: Gross Max
Structural engineer: Adams Kara Taylor
Services engineer: Arup
Access consultant: Arup
Acoustic consultant: Arup
Fire consultant: Arup
Lighting consultant: Arup
Façade consultant: Arup
Quantity surveyor: Gardiner & Theobold
Contractor: R Durtnell & Sons
Photography: Simon Menges, Richard Bryant, Paul Riddle
Sketch: David Chipperfield

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    Turner Contemporary is a new gallery in Margate on the north coast of Kent. Its name was inspired by the town’s association with the English painter JMW Turner, who exclaimed, ‘… the skies over Thanet [the north-eastern tip of Kent] are the loveliest in all Europe’. The gallery is located on a prominent seafront, previously a car park, where a guesthouse frequented by Turner once stood. The new two-storey building is designed to maximise both the dramatic setting...

    Project details
    • Year 2011
    • Work finished in 2011
    • Client Kent County Council
    • Status Completed works
    • Type Museums
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