subscribe
free e-newsletter
contact us
advertise
Subscribe to Architectural Record
and save 60% off the newsstand price
print this article   |    e-mail this article    |   comment     

De La Warr Pavilion

Bexhill-on-Sea, United Kingdom
John McAslan + Partners

A palace for the arts re-emerges as a Modernist landmark.

The Grade I-listed De La Warr Pavilion at Bexhill-on-Sea is widely considered to be the most important British Modern Movement building of the inter-war years. Designed by Eric Mendelssohn and Serge Chermayeff, its steel and concrete structure and internal fittings were radical. The pavilion was the first public British building in the International Style: a people’s palace embodying Modernist architecture’s concerns with healthy living conditions and accessible art.

De La Warr Pavilion
Photo © Peter Cook

Rate this project:
Based on what you have seen and read about this project, how would you grade it? Use the stars below to indicate your assessment, five stars being the highest rating.
----- Advertising -----

The De La Warr Pavilion was popular in the years immediately following its opening in 1935. However, after the Second World War the pavilion’s use declined and the building began to fall apart; it was little appreciated and suffered from many alterations.

The key drawback of the streamlined, finely detailed architecture of the De La Warr Pavilion was that maintenance costs grew exponentially. By the late 1980s, the building’s future was in doubt, even though it continued to host more than 1,000 events—and serve 70,000 restaurant meals—annually.

In 1991 the De La Warr Pavilion Trust appointed John McAslan + Partners to report on the repair and future use of the building. The practice found major disrepair, and a number of significant shortcomings of the original specifications, and set out a strategic plan for rapid structural repairs, followed by complete refurbishment.

The external elevations were restored to original specifications. The architects reorganized the area surrounding the building and the parking lot, and repaired the entrance hall, restaurant and kitchens, auditorium, bar, conference rooms, and sun parlor. The legendary and beautiful architectural feature, the pavilion’s long-closed south terrace, was reinstated.

The restoration of surfaces, fitting and key features, such as the pendant light fitting hanging in the spiral south staircase, were matters of material precision. The need to work with the existing structure and materials meant that interventions were rarely simply achieved. Typically, several objectives had to be dealt with simultaneously. It was possible to upgrade some specifications: the new high performance glazing system, replaced low quality insertions, and has improved the environmental performance of the pavilion’s public areas.

John McAslan + Partners also proposed two new single-story extensions to the north and south of the auditorium, housing additional theatre and practice spaces. This remedied space issues and allowed the pavilion’s original interiors to deliver their architectural impact, though repairs, reinstatement, and new extensions were constrained by the pavilion’s Grade I listing.

Formal name of project: De La Warr Pavilion

Location: Bexhill-on-Sea, United Kingdom

Gross square footage: 4,000 sq.m.

Total construction cost: £8 million

Completion Date: April 2008

Owner:
De La Warr Pavilion Trust

Architect:
John McAslan + Partners
49 Princes Place
London W11 4QA
United Kingdom
Telephone + 44 20 7727 2663
Facsimile  + 44 20 7221 8835
www.mcaslan.co.uk

Reader Comments:

Reader Commented / Recommended
Most Commented Most Recommended
Rankings reflect comments made in the past 14 days
Rankings reflect votes made in the past 14 days
----- Advertising -----
Submit a Photo
Off the Record: Recent Blog Posts
The blog written by the staff of Architectural Record
View all blog posts >> Sponsored by:
Alpolic Materials
AR Selects: Project Blogs
Find building materials in Sweets
McGrawHill
Search

© 2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved