Arts & Culture \ Dunfermline Carnegie Library & Galleries
In 2007 Richard Murphy Architects won a competition organized by Fife Council and the RIAS for a major new cultural centre in the historic centre of Dunfermline. The brief envisaged a museum space, art galleries, local history archive and reading room, childrens’ centre, café and meeting rooms lying alongside, and integrating with, the world’s first Andrew Carnegie Library, a Grade B listed building. A Grade B listed former bank building was also part of the site.
The competition design organized the new building along a new top lit street with a journey to all the facilities criss-crossing the street on bridges to the top of the building. The entrance proposed hinging a giant slice of the former bank façade to form the new entrance and although welcomed by everyone as a very exciting and innovatory way off entering the otherwise landlocked site Historic Scotland refused to consider the idea.
Eventually the Council were able to purchase an adjacent car-park and this we proposed to convert into a walled garden which in turn leads to a new entrance courtyard off this garden. Our garden design merges with the mediaeval garden at the rear of the adjacent Abbott’s House Museum and includes two sculptures from Burns’ Tam O’Shanter and also a small maze.
The revised design maintains a top-lit internal street as its organizing device. There are three main new spaces. At the lower level is a major new facility for the research and study of local history and its archive organized on a tiered section looking out at the Abbey. The new library facilities for children is also at this level and opens directly onto a lawn and external auditorium. The café is on the first floor with terraces looking out onto the Abbey and graveyard and above this on the same level are the double level museum and the three exhibition galleries. The circulation system is an ‘architectural promenade’ culminating in these facilities but also continuing back into the main building and allowing access to two main existing spaces in the library, the Murison Burns Room which becomes a meeting / function space and the adjacent reference library which will become an activity and lecture space.
Externally, the materials are a combination of stone, oak and corten steel. The latter is to designate the fact that a majority of the museum displays the industrial heritage of the town. A major feature of the museum itself, which has been designed in collaboration with Redman Design, is that there are internal framed views of significant nearby historic buildings.
The project opened to the public in September 2017 and has subsequently won an RIAS 2017 Award and the RIAS Best Building in Scotland Award 2017.
Architects | Richard Murphy, Bill Black, Matt Bremner, Kris Grant, Brian Tobin, Martin Lambie, Alex Thurman |
Engineers | AECOM |
M&E Engineers | RYBKA |
Quantity Surveyor | RLB (Rider Levett Bucknall) |
Exhibition Designer | Redman Design Ltd |
Construction Cost | £9m |
Size | Extension: 2305m² Existing building: 1137m² |
Contractor | Bam |
Client | Fife Cultural Trust |
Awards
2017 | EAA Large Project Award |
2017 | RIAS ANDREW DOOLAN BEST BUILDING IN SCOTLAND AWARD |
2017 | EAA Building of the Year |
2017 | RIAS Award |
2017 | RIBA Award |
2018 | RICS AWARDS 2018 REGIONAL AWARD COMMUNITY BENEFIT |
2018 | SPACES CIVIC BUILDING OF THE YEAR AWARD |
2018 | RICS Community Benefit Award |
2018 | REGIONAL AWARD BEST HERITAGE TOURISM EXPERIEMCE |
2018 | Civic Trust Award Commendation |
Press
2017 | New Chapter as Dunfermline's Carnegie Library & Galleries is officially opened | Dunfermline Press |
2017 | Carnegie Library Steps into the New Century | Scottish Life |
2017 | Word on the Street | Urban Realm |
2017 | Bodies in the Library | RIBA Journal |
2017 | Step Inside Scotland's new Dunfermline Carnegie Library & Galleries | Bustler.net |
2017 | Dunfermline Carnegie Library wins double architecture award - RIAS Best Building & Client of the Year Awards | The Scotsman |
2017 | Cast of Culture | Project Scotland |
2017 | Material Gains - Dunfermline's Carnegie Library & Galleries | Architecture Today |
2017 | Visitors Flock to Dunfermline's new Museum | Dunfermline Press |
2017 | It is a project that has transformed the home of the world's first Andrew Carnegie Library into Scotland's newest architectural landmark.... | The Scotsman |
2017 | An Audience with Richard Murphy at Dunfermline Carnegie Library & Galleries for a personal insight into the project | Fife Avocado Sweet |
2017 | Dunfermline Carnegie Library named Edinburgh Architectural Association Building of the Year | The Scotsman |
2017 | Dunfermline Carnegie Library & Galleries gear up for public unveil | Urban Realm |
2017 | Applause for Dunfermline's new £12 million cultural hub | Dunfermline Courier |
9 December 2016 | Dunfermine gallery and library space previewed ahead of Spring opening | Urban Realm |
22 June 2016 | Project Team Delivering Museum Dunfermline Deserves | The Courier |
14 February 2014 | Dunfermline Museum & Art Gallery to move on site | Urban Realm |
1 July 2012 | New Plan gets nod | Project Scotland |
11 June 2012 | Richard Murphy Architects submits Dunfermline Arts Centre for Planning | Building Design |
1 March 2011 | New Life For An Ancient Burgh | Scottish Life |
22 November 2010 | Home To Scotland's First Kings - Now £10m Museum To Be Town's New Crowning Glory | Scotsman.com |
1 August 2007 | Clever Murphy Lands Dunfermline Museum | Project Scotland |
24 July 2007 | Museum Planned For Dunfermline | Leisure Opportunities |
20 July 2007 | Development Of The Bruce's Town Hinges On Innovative Museum Design | The Scotsman |
20 July 2007 | Verona Comes To Dunfermline Museum | Building Design |
20 July 2007 | Richard Murphy Takes Dunfermline Museum | Builder & Engineer Online |
19 July 2007 | Firm Picked To Work Up Designs For City Museum | Dunfermline Press |
18 July 2007 | Richard Murphy Bags Dunfermline Museum | Architects' Journal |