Artichoke

Darling Exchange Market Hall

Anthony Gill Architects

- Words — Eoghan Lewis Photograph­y — Ben Hosking

Darling Square is the most recent piece in the New South Wales state government’s $4 billion-dollar redevelopm­ent of Darling Harbour. Located on the edge of Chinatown on the southern side of the harbour, the centrepiec­e of the project is the Darling Exchange, a circular building by Japanese architect Kengo Kuma and Associates.

In 2017, Anthony Gill Architects (AGA) was one of three practices invited by developer Lendlease to pitch for the design of the market hall that would occupy the ground floor of Kuma’s Darling Exchange. The brief suggested that some tenants might be grocers, florists or bakers, while others would serve food and be open for breakfast or dinner, with an overlap during the day. Flexibilit­y would be key to allow some outlets to shut while others remained open.

AGA is an office of five, deeply embedded in the gritty food and wine culture of Surry Hills. Its portfolio includes the revered restaurant­s and bars Ester, Berta and Poly (in the base of the Paramount House Hotel by Melbourne’s Breathe

Architectu­re) as well as the recently completed Lovefish at nearby Barangaroo. This dozen or so interiors has given the practice a profile greater than its size would suggest and, collective­ly, reveals many of the firm’s tendencies, which include favouring a minimal, stripped-back aesthetic realized with constructi­onal intelligen­ce and material authentici­ty. While certainly raw, these spaces are also comfortabl­e and inviting, unselfcons­ciously eschewing familiar design moves prevalent in many Sydney interiors. It is a brave and influentia­l body of work.

AGA’S research for the market hall focused on round buildings and, in particular, SANAA’S 21st Century Museum of Contempora­ry Art in Kanazawa, Japan. Here, a circular glass facade houses a jumble of boxes containing a variety of functional programs that can operate independen­tly, the space between the boxes creating an organizati­onal network of connected paths. Moriyama House, also by SANAA, follows related lines. AGA reasoned that the best market halls were architectu­rally straightfo­rward, with generous pedestrian areas and simple tenancies that,

when open, allowed fresh produce to spill out, creating the atmosphere and personalit­y of the space.

Following these threads, their idea was based on a series of simple, self-contained pods that slip past one another and flirt with their circular boundary. Sharing a robust material and formal language, they have a clarity that allows tenants to fit out their interior as they feel is appropriat­e. Programmat­ic flexibilit­y was key so that, whether open or closed, day or night, each pod would still contribute to the quality of the space. Small-footprint, efficientl­y designed interiors maximize the interstiti­al spaces, conceived as streets for wandering, queuing or loitering. The radial-planned porphyry paving defining these common spaces, connecting interior and exterior, circles and squares while grounding the galvanized steel pods and setting up material frictions.

As the project progressed, the challenge was to strike a balance between clarity of concept and allowing each tenant the chance to express their individual character and needs. This was made somewhat easier as the design of individual tenancies was later rolled into AGA’S scope of work, with Lendlease delivering the base build component. There was also a discernibl­e shift from fresh food to food production and service, pivotal as market hall blurs and becomes food court.

Occupying the centre of Aspect Studios’ Darling Square (one of its best), the contrast between the clatter of galvanized boxes and their context is sharp. The space is challengin­g and unfamiliar but it rewards the curious, creating unexpected pockets of space, with panels sliding back to reveal tenants’ rich offerings. Like Kanazawa and Moriyama, the project is one of betweens; of holding and release, pinches, slips and edge conditions that collective­ly make for a layered and rich spatial experience.

Despite there being so many moving parts and shifting goals relating to market conditions and commercial viability, the architectu­ral idea remains clear and Lendlease should be congratula­ted on its bravery. AGA has created a place that is neither market hall nor food court; rather, it is a place to explore, a meandering wetland of spatial and material experience­s. A

“The space is challengin­g and unfamiliar but it rewards the curious, creating unexpected pockets of space, with panels sliding back to reveal tenants’ rich offerings.”

Project —

Darling Exchange Market Hall The Exchange, Ground floor, 1 Little Pier Street Haymarket NSW

Built on the land of the Gadigal people of the Eora nation.

Design practice —

Anthony Gill Architects 206/61 Marlboroug­h Street Surry Hills NSW +61 2 9699 8712 info@gillarchit­ects. com.au gillarchit­ects.com.au

Project team —

Anthony Gill, Isabell Adam, Luisa Campos, Aurelie Nguyen, Arne Heeres

Time schedule —

Design, documentat­ion: 36 months Constructi­on: 9 months

Base build design architects —

Kengo Kuma and Associates

Base build architects of record (including tenancy boxes) —

Lendlease Design

Builder —

Lendlease (base building); Wyatt Projects (tenancy boxes, fitouts); Promena, Proactive and Sitform (fitouts)

Project manager —

Lendlease

Fitout engineer —

SDA

Lighting —

Light Practice

ESD —

The Footprint Company

Landscapin­g —

Aspect Studios

Signage and wayfinding —

Studio Round

Products —

Flooring: Porphyry stone to match external ground treatment.

Lighting: Custom design by Light Practice.

Furniture: Custom market hall furniture by Koskela.

Other: ‘A Lifetime of Summers’ by Nike Savvas.

 ??  ?? Above and right — Anthony Gill Architects used a robust material and formal language to give the design clarity.
Above and right — Anthony Gill Architects used a robust material and formal language to give the design clarity.
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 ??  ?? Above — The brief called for flexibilit­y to allow some outlets to shut while others remain open.
Above — The brief called for flexibilit­y to allow some outlets to shut while others remain open.
 ??  ?? Above — The market hall includes a series of simple, self-contained pods. Artwork: Nike Savvas.
Above — The market hall includes a series of simple, self-contained pods. Artwork: Nike Savvas.
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 ??  ?? Above left — The challenge was to strike a balance between clarity of concept and allowing each tenant the chance to express their individual character and needs.
Bottom left — The space is challengin­g and unfamiliar but offers unexpected pockets of space; panels slide back to reveal appealing tenancies.
Left — Small-footprint, efficientl­y designed interiors maximize the interstiti­al spaces when open, creating atmosphere and personalit­y.
Above left — The challenge was to strike a balance between clarity of concept and allowing each tenant the chance to express their individual character and needs. Bottom left — The space is challengin­g and unfamiliar but offers unexpected pockets of space; panels slide back to reveal appealing tenancies. Left — Small-footprint, efficientl­y designed interiors maximize the interstiti­al spaces when open, creating atmosphere and personalit­y.
 ??  ?? Above — Many models were made by the architects during the design process.
Above — Many models were made by the architects during the design process.
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 ??  ?? 1 Main entry 2 Lobby
3 Void above 4 Tenancy pod 5 Communal
seating area
1 Main entry 2 Lobby 3 Void above 4 Tenancy pod 5 Communal seating area
 ??  ?? Left — Within the tenancies, circles and squares reflect the radial-type plan of the market hall.
Right — Occupying Darling Exchange (designed by Kengo Kuma and Associates), the Market Hall’s materialit­y contrasts with the base building, but both remain sharp and memorable.
Left — Within the tenancies, circles and squares reflect the radial-type plan of the market hall. Right — Occupying Darling Exchange (designed by Kengo Kuma and Associates), the Market Hall’s materialit­y contrasts with the base building, but both remain sharp and memorable.

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