A new arts centre, incorporating a visual arts gallery, dance studio and theatre, commissioned by St Edwards School Oxford.

The North Wall is a new arts centre for St Edwards School, Oxford. It is unusual in that it is designed also to operate as a public arts venue for much of the year.

The building, which forms part of the boundary between the school campus and the street, comprises a flexible, 250-seat ‘courtyard’ theatre, a fully equipped drama studio, a dance studio and a visual arts gallery, along with full front and back of house facilities for in house productions and professional touring companies.

The name of the project derives from the ancient, mellow stone boundary wall that runs the entire length of the street elevation and which has been incorporated into the building.

Converted from a grade 2 listed Victorian swimming pool (which was itself built onto the older wall), the new timber-framed theatre uses moveable rostra to allow end-on, in-the-round, traverse and thrust stage settings to be employed. The remaining facilities are housed in a new building that combines with the stone wall and the pitched roofline of the swimming pool to form a coherent, carefully scaled streetscape to the public side and a new courtyard and outdoor performance space to the school side.

The walls and roof of the building are clad in unseasoned English oak shakes (hand-split shingles) and thin vertical slats, designed to bend and twist into organic, patinated surfaces that will vary in colour and texture according to orientation and exposure. The combination of vernacular forms, large frameless windows and a traditional but non-local primary cladding material is intended to appear both familiar and strange in the red brick and clay tile setting of the school and its immediate surroundings, emphasising the purpose of the building as a place for innovation and creativity within a sensitive historic environment.

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