pARC Installation

pARC Installation
© Tom Waldenberg

pARC Installation 

The Urban Conga

ARCHITECTS
The Urban Conga

PHOTOGRAPHS
Tom Waldenberg

AREA
864 Ft²

ASSOCIATE DESIGNER
Juan Esparza, Brianne De La Torre, Alex Buckley

PRINCIPAL DESIGNER
Ryan Swanson, Maeghann Coleman

YEAR
2022

LOCATION
Brooklyn, United States

CATEGORY
Installations & Structures

Text description provided by architect.

pARC was designed by The Urban Conga to serve as an open-ended programmable space for the community of Chapel Hill and the Ackland Art Museum located at the University of North Carolina.

The Urban Conga studio designed the spatial intervention through a series of participatory design workshops with community stakeholders and museum representatives.

pARC Installation
© Tom Waldenberg
pARC Installation
© Tom Waldenberg

pARC was designed to sit on the open terrace of the museum to serve as a bridge to connect the museum to the street.

Serving as a programmable extension to the conversations, events, teachings, and programming that currently exists within the doors of the Ackland.

pARC Installation
© Tom Waldenberg
pARC Installation
© Tom Waldenberg

The design shows how play can be utilized as a tool in the democratization of art institutions by taking art off the pedestal and allowing people to take ownership of the work and space.

It invites people up off the street and into the museum that might have once never felt comfortable entering the space.

pARC Installation
© Tom Waldenberg
pARC Installation
© Tom Waldenberg

The installation becomes a transformative communal platform for all users to engage with the museum, university, and each other in new ways.

The design of pARC both mimics and contrasts the Georgian-style architecture of the museum. The design takes this symmetrical colonial composition and breaks it into a series of interconnected arcs.

pARC Installation
© Tom Waldenberg
pARC Installation
© Tom Waldenberg

These series of arcs appear to grow up from the ground to frame out various social spaces that allow the users to put their own identity onto the work, the museum, and the surrounding space.

pARC becomes a flexible communal space evoking endless ways to play, gather, perform, teach, converse, or even take a nap.

pARC Installation
© Tom Waldenberg
pARC Installation
© Tom Waldenberg

The spatial gesture takes on its user's identity and utilizes its playable design to break down social barriers and spark communal connection within the space.

The color of the work was designed in coordination with the rebranding of the Ackland to help draw people into the museum and serve as a connector to their new brand and mission.

pARC Installation
© Tom Waldenberg
pARC Installation
© Tom Waldenberg

The work utilizes universal design standards to make it an inclusive space that anyone can use.  Underneath the grass sits a sustainable mesh that allows for wheelchair accessibility within the space while still allowing the grass to grow up through it.

Each archway serves as a framed or reflective view of the surrounding context that allows the user to look at the area through a different lens. As one passes the work, they begin to realize their movement changes the colors of the panels sparking different filtered views of the context around them.

pARC Installation
© Tom Waldenberg
pARC Installation
© Tom Waldenberg

The installation not only responds to the user but also the environment by reflecting and refracting the surrounding context through its dichroic lenses while also casting shadows onto the ground and the panels themselves.

The work utilizes light both during the day and at night as a tool to evoke play and wonder into the space. During the day, the user can interact with the sun to cast shadows onto the panels or shift the colors reflected within the space.

pARC Installation
© Tom Waldenberg
pARC Installation
© Tom Waldenberg

This interaction sparks a connection between the person and the sun and shows how their actions begin to create a reaction within the space.

At night this same effect is created through the use of red, green, and blue lights that allow the user to color mix with their shadows on the panels.

pARC Installation
© Tom Waldenberg
pARC Installation
© Tom Waldenberg

The shadow play on the work becomes another way that the user can begin to play with the work, space, and others.


pARC Installation
pARC Installation
pARC Installation
pARC Installation