Project Details
- Project Name
- pARC
- Location
-
101 S Columbia St
NC
- Architect
- The Urban Conga
- Client/Owner
- Ackland Art Museum
- Project Types
-
Cultural ,Entertainment
- Project Scope
- Addition/Expansion
- Size
- 864 sq. feet
- Year Completed
- 2022
- Awards
- 2022 AIA - Local Awards
- Shared by
- The Urban Conga
- Team
-
Ryan Swanson, Principal Designer
Maeghann Coleman, Principal Architect
- Consultants
- Structural Engineer: Midwest Design Group
- Project Status
- Built
- Room or Space
- Outdoor
Project Description
FROM THE DESIGNERS:
pARC is a spatial intervention created to serve as an open-ended programmable space for the community of Chapel Hill, Ackland Art Museum, and the University of North Carolina. The spatial installation becomes an extension to the conversations, activities, education, and other programming that currently exists within the doors of the Ackland Art Museum in Chapel Hill, NC. pARC was designed through a series of participatory design workshops that utilized play methodologies to create an inclusive process that allowed the community to share and contribute to the design process. During this process, it was found that many people within the community felt uncomfortable entering the museum or were unaware of the free programing that existed inside. Collectively, this feedback and other input of the community and museum representatives lead to the final design of the space and its programming.
pARC was designed as a transformative communal space that provides an open-ended playable platform for the museum to better connect with the surrounding community. pARC’s design begins to showcase how play methodologies can be utilized as a design tool in the democratization of art institutions by beginning to take art off the pedestal and allowing people to engage and take ownership of the work and space. The installation becomes a landmark inviting people up off the street and into the museum that might have once been unaware or never felt comfortable entering the space. 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 challenges the Georgian-style architecture of the museum. It adopts the symmetrical composition and breaks it into a series of interconnected arcs. These series of arcs 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. The spatial gesture takes on the 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 identity.
The space is transformed through the interactions of its users and surrounding context. It responds to the user and environment through the manipulation of light both during the day and at night as a tool to evoke moments of joy and wonder in the space. As visitors pass the work, they begin to realize their movement changes the colors of the panels sparking different filtered views of the context around them. The shadow play component of the work can be utilized in different areas of the work throughout the day and at night. At night the panels are backlit by red, yellow, and blue lights allowing you to play with your silhouettes and color mix with through your movements. pARC becomes a transformative landmark for all types of play, from physical to fantasy play, highlighting how play can be utilized as a critical tool in evoking more inclusive and equitable communal spaces.