Diller Scofidio + Renfro and Woods Bagot design Aboriginal Art and Cultures Centre for Adelaide

by | Feb 18, 2021 | Featured Slider, Latest, News

Diller Scofidio + Renfro and Woods Bagot have revealed visuals of the Aboriginal Art and Cultures Centre in Adelaide, which will take cues from traditional indigenous shelters. Once complete, the 11,500-square-metre cultural centre will host a mix of exhibition and event spaces to celebrate the “past, present and future” of Australia’s First Nations.

According to Diller Scofidio + Renfro and Woods Bagot, the building’s entire design will also honour the traditions of indigenous Australians.

Developed together with an Aboriginal Reference Group, this includes its layered, basket-like facade that references a wurlie – a traditional temporary shelter occupied by indigenous people.

Centre showcases world’s “oldest living cultures”

“We’re thrilled to be part of this ground-breaking vision to create a place of pride that authentically honours the oldest living cultures on the planet,” said Charles Renfro, partner at Diller Scofidio + Renfro.

An aerial visual of a museum
Above: the centre is designed to evoke a wurlie shelter. Top image: it will be distinguished by its layered facade

“The Aboriginal Art and Cultures Centre will be a place for all Australians to remember ourselves, to learn the truth-telling of our past, and to re-imagine ourselves together to create new memories as a connected community,” added Woods Bagot’s principal, Rosina Di Maria.

“It will be a platform for developing Australian culture – informed by the past, shaped by the now, for our future,” she said.

Woven facade to wrap galleries

Once complete, the building will enclose 7,000 square metres of exhibition spaces in varying sizes and styles.

It will be distinguished by its shimmering facade, evoking the woven, textured materials traditionally used to create a wurlie, and rest on a glass base and slanted columns.

Visuals of the interiors are yet to be revealed, but according to the studios, each gallery will offer views and connections to the building’s natural surroundings as a nod to Aboriginal people’s deep connection to country and place.

This will include reveals in the upper galleries that frame views of the sky while also offering passersby glimpses inside.

Outdoor exhibition spaces to feature

On its lower levels, the centre will also incorporate galleries, outdoor exhibition spaces and performance areas that will be carved into the landscape.

This includes an amphitheatre designed for Welcome to Country ceremonies, which are performed by Aboriginal people to welcome visitors onto their traditional land.

The building will be complete with a flexible, three-story gathering and performance space at its heart, which will also double as a spiralling circulating space with access to each floor.

This article was first published on DeZeen, for the original click here

LATEST ISSUE

Pro Landscaper Africa February Sports & Play Issue 2022