The Faith Museum | Niall McLaughlin Architects
Bishop Auckland / United Kingdom / 2021
The team were appointed in 2013 following a successful compeon for a masterplan of the Auckland Castle site. The client, The Auckland Project was founded by philanthropist Jonathan Ruffer. The project is on of a series of urban and historic intervenons that seek to preserve the Castle’s heritage, promote Bishop Auckland as a visitor desnaon and reinvigorate the town. It is the result of an extensive and collaborave consultaon process with Durham County Council and Historic England and it received a grant from the Heritage Loery Fund.
The Faith Museum is an extension to the Grade I listed Castle and is sited along the line of a medieval retaining wall of the original castle complex. It houses an exhibion of faith in Britain and an environmentally controlled art store. The building type is secular but seeks to communicate a heightened sense of the sacred to reflect the museum’s contents. Key details, such as roof finials, were developed to enhance a simple barn form. A picture window on the south gable gives views out to the parkland, enabling visitors to orientate themselves in the world whilst on their journey through the museum. The principal first floor exhibion space is characterised by its lightweight, thicket-like roof structure. The building’s simple form factor, low glazing rao and fabric first approach form its low carbon in-use strategy.
The external envelope is formed of a single material, Cop Crag sandstone, quarried locally in Northumberland. The stone is cut and laid in different ways: smooth ashlar walling is the dominant external wall treatment with a split-faced plinth on the east elevaon and random rubble to the loading bay; as rainscreen cladding to the steeply pitched roof; and large pieces for details including the projecng fins on the gable, crossing finials, lintels and sills. The stone has a golden tone and is naturally varied in its colour and panaon with areas of delicate veining, paerns akin to animal markings and great splashes of pink. The building form is monolithic and it is the lively stone that takes centre stage, providing variaon and interest.
The team were appointed in 2013 following a successful compeon for a masterplan of the Auckland Castle site. The client, The Auckland Project was founded by philanthropist Jonathan Ruffer. The project is on of a series of urban and historic intervenons that seek to preserve the Castle’s heritage, promote Bishop Auckland as a visitor desnaon and reinvigorate the town. It is the result of an extensive and collaborave consultaon process with Durham County Council and Historic...
- Year 2021
- Work finished in 2021
- Client The Auckland Project
- Status Completed works
- Type Museums


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