The Brindley

The Brindley is a theatre in the town of Runcorn, Cheshire, England. Located by the Bridgewater Canal, the centre is named after the canal's engineer, James Brindley. It opened in autumn 2004; the architects were John Miller and Partners.[1] The building is owned and operated by Halton Borough Council.[2]

The Brindley
Exterior view of the entrance to The Brindley
AddressHigh Street, Runcorn WA7 1BG
Coordinates53.3406°N 2.7315°W / 53.3406; -2.7315
OwnerHalton Borough Council
TypeTheatre
Capacity420 theatre / 108 studio
Construction
OpenedSeptember 2004 (2004-09)
ArchitectJohn Miller and Partners
Structural engineerDewhurst Macfarlane & Partners
Services engineerSVM
Main contractorsG&J Sedden
Website
thebrindley.org.uk

Design and construction

Halton Borough Council were concerned about the building's impact on the environment and about its energy requirements. Therefore "low energy, high efficiency techniques" were used in its construction.[3] These include a TermoDeck slab system, a storage technique for controlling the environment within large and medium-sized buildings using hollow cores within pre-cast concrete floor slabs as ventilation ducts.[4]

Facilities

The venue consists of a 420-seat main auditorium playing host to touring productions, a professional pantomime each Christmas season, local amateur shows and in-house productions, a 108-seat studio which also serves as a single screen cinema, an exhibition and gallery space, an education room, a dark room, a digital imaging room, dressing rooms, a meeting room, a bar and a café overlooking the Bridgewater Canal.[2]

Awards

The centre has won several awards for its architecture: The Centre Vision Award from The Civic Trust in 2005,[1] the Excellence in Access award from the ADAPT Trust (Access for Disabled People to Arts Premises Today), and the Architectural Award from the Royal Institute of British Architects.[5] RIBA praised the building for fitting into its context, using the canal-side location to give views, and making good use of its budget.[6] It also won the Open Award for Technical Excellence in Architectural Technology 2008.[7]

For its community activities, The Brindley won the title Best Arts Project in the UK at The National Lottery Awards in 2007.[8] In May 2008, the theatre won the Best Performance Venue Award at the Mersey Partnership Tourism Awards 2008.[5]

References

  1. Special Award: Centre Vision Award, The Civic Trust, archived from the original on 19 June 2007, retrieved 29 September 2007
  2. About us, Halton Borough Council, retrieved 23 December 2017
  3. Brindley Arts Centre, Runcorn, SVM Consulting Engineers, retrieved 16 January 2009
  4. Barton, P.; Beggs, C. B.; Sleigh, P. A. (September 2002), A theoretical study of the thermal performance of the TermoDeck hollow core slab system, Applied Thermal Engineering, vol. 22:13, pp. 1485–1499, archived from the original on 10 September 2012, retrieved 16 January 2009
  5. The Brindley: News, Halton Borough Council, archived from the original on 4 November 2007, retrieved 29 September 2007
  6. The Brindley Arts Centre, Runcorn Archived 2009-11-23 at the Wayback Machine, RIBA, retrieved on 16 January 2009
  7. Glynn, Paul (20 August 2009), "Brindley Arts Centre receives Open Award for Technical Excellence in Architectural Technology 2008", Runcorn and Widnes Weekly News, Trinity Mirror North West & North Wales, retrieved 20 August 2009
  8. Breslin, Holly (20 September 2007), "We did it!", Runcorn Weekly News, Trinity Mirror North West & North Wales Limited, retrieved 29 September 2007
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.