Denton Corker Marshall

Shepparton Art Museum

Shepparton Art Museum
© John Gollings

SHEPPARTON ART MUSEUM

Denton Corker Marshall

YEAR
2020

PHOTOGRAPHS
John Gollings

MANUFACTURERS
AutoDesk, Britex, Erco, Rondo, iGuzzini, Caroma, Criterion

BUILDER
Kane Constructions

LOCATION
Shepparton, Australia

CATEGORY
Museums & Exhibit, Museum, Landmarks & Monuments

SERVICES ENGINEER
Integral Group

ESD CONSULTANT
Integral Group

LANDSCAPE CONSULTANT
Urban Initiatives

PROJECT MANAGER
Greater Shepparton City Council

STRUCTURAL ENGINEER
Arup

FAÇADE CONSULTANT
BG&E Facades

AREA
5000 m²

BUILDING SURVEYOR
Steve Watson & Partners

LIGHTING CONSULTANT
Arup

ACOUSTIC CONSULTANT
Arup

ACCESS CONSULTANT
du Chateau Chun

TRAFFIC
GTA Consultants

SIGNAGE/WAYFINDING
Studio Ongarato

Text description provided by architect.

The design of SAM is characterised by simplicity and clarity, with compelling imagery creating a landmark cultural destination for Shepparton. It is located on the approach to the town centre, within a popular park within the flat Goulburn River Plain.

The scheme was won in a limited competition. It includes an art museum, Visitors’ Information Centre, Kaiela Arts Aboriginal Community Arts Centre and a 150 person event space able to operate out of hours for conferences, weddings and social occasions, all within a 5,000m2 cubic form.

Shepparton Art Museum
© John Gollings
Shepparton Art Museum
© John Gollings

A restricted ground floor, required due to a floodway across the site, was turned into a design opportunity. The small footprint was extruded vertically over five levels to generate the distinctive small-and-tall art museum.

This strategy maximises much-used park space, while also creating a beacon in the low, flat Shepparton landscape. The height also affords panoramic views from the rooftop events space across the lake and Goulburn Red River Gum Reserve beyond.

Shepparton Art Museum
© John Gollings
Shepparton Art Museum
© John Gollings

The design is ingeniously integrated into the park via a dramatic Art Hill, screening all building services, back-of-house and loading under the expanded parkland. The Art Hill has the advantage of effectively creating an upper ground level, enabling the museum cafe to enjoy an elevated outlook whilst being directly connected to, and accessible from, the park.

Internally, it is a highly legible, transparent and accessible museum experience, centred around an open, circulation galleria.

Shepparton Art Museum
© John Gollings
Shepparton Art Museum
© John Gollings

The interior design – the relationship of spaces, intuitive wayfinding, logical relationships – are overlaid with contrasts of drama, reflection, outlook, introspection and discovery. Four different galleries, totalling 800m2, are accommodated.

Two of the galleries are designed to ASHRAE (American Society of Heating Refrigeration and Air conditioning Engineers) Class AA standard to be able to accommodate exhibitions on loan from premium museums and galleries.

Shepparton Art Museum
© John Gollings
Shepparton Art Museum
© John Gollings

This required dedicated AHU and preconditioners along with the building envelope, internal partitions and glass sliding doors being designed to higher airtightness requirements. Similar standards are applied to the preparation and conservation rooms and collection storage.

The facades of SAM comprise four thin floating L-shaped plates suspended in the landscape. They group together, at different heights and contrasting materiality, to form a composition at a scale comparable to the red river gums. By subverting the expression of built form into a composition of abstract sculptural elements, scale becomes indeterminate.

Shepparton Art Museum
© John Gollings
Shepparton Art Museum
© John Gollings

This allows each facade plate to become a canvas, layered into the treed landscape of dappled light and shade, able to transform as a base for temporary installations or projection imagery as an integral rather than incidental characteristic.

SAM is a building whose physical form is surrendered to a shifting play of colour and patina changing with weather and time of day. It is simultaneously powerful and recessive. Each plate is an element in its own right, powerful enough to be eroded with a combination of large punched and smaller perforated openings where outlook, from within, is required. In effect, the building is conceived as a ‘land sculpture’.

Shepparton Art Museum
© John Gollings


Shepparton Art Museum
Sketch
Shepparton Art Museum
Sketch

Denton Corker Marshall
T +61 3 90123600
Denton Corker Marshall
Level 19/55 Collins St, Melbourne VIC 3000, Australia