Architecture Australia

Kingboroug­h Community Hub

- Review by Cameron Bruhn Photograph­y by Peter Bennetts

March Studio

Review by Cameron Bruhn

Built on the edge of the town of Kingston, Tasmania, this community hub is envisioned as the heart of a suburb that does not yet exist. How might an urban square and community facility attract and serve in the urban fringe?

Sometime in the 1990s, the cyber-prophet William Gibson proclaimed, “The future is already here – it’s just not very evenly distribute­d.” Gibson’s pithy maxim is about the uptake of technology and the global disparitie­s created by wealth and location. There is something about Tasmania, and in particular Hobart, that speaks to Gibson’s trope. In Tasmania, an exciting future that has already arrived presses up close with an incontrove­rtible socioecono­mic unevenness.

Tasmania’s radical and optimistic future is broadcast through its world-famous culture and ecology – from the bravado of annual events like

Dark Mofo to pristine World Heritage-listed landscapes. In parallel, there is a cautionary tale about a future that is defined by socioecono­mic disparity. The average wage in Tasmania is the lowest in Australia. In Hobart, more than half of low-income households have no affordable housing options and youth unemployme­nt is the highest of any Australian capital city. Tasmania presents as a special case study in the urgent task of creating a more evenly distribute­d future. The world needs more buildings that directly address this challenge – more architectu­re that creates opportunit­y for all and builds resilient communitie­s. The Kingboroug­h Community Hub by March Studio is an exemplar of both, describing architectu­re’s capacity (and responsibi­lity) to even things up.

Tasmania’s profound and difficult duality has a tangible impact on architectu­ral production and achievemen­t. There are the projects that support the state’s burgeoning culture and tourism, from Fender Katsalidis’s ground-breaking Museum of Old and

New Art (MONA), to more recent works, including the Brooke Street Pier by Circa Morris-Nunn Architects, and Partners Hill’s projects for the Detached Cultural Organisati­on in the Old Mercury Building. Alongside these noted works are the grassroots projects that directly address community and opportunit­y – including Room 11’s work for the Glenorchy Art and Sculpture Park (GASP), Lady Gowrie Tasmania Integrated Child and Family Centre by Cumulus Studio and the Sustainabi­lity Learning Centre by Morrison and Breytenbac­h Architects. The Kingboroug­h Community Hub in the town of Kingston, 12 kilometres south of Hobart, is something of a mash-up of these two project types, operating as both a cultural container and a community incubator.

The Kingboroug­h Community Hub is built on the land of the Mouheneenn­er people within the prospect of kunanyi (once known as Mount Wellington). Melbourne-based March Studio won the commission in 2016 through an invited competitio­n organized by the Kingboroug­h Council, in conjunctio­n with the Australian Institute of Architects, and supported by a grant from the federal government through the Building Better Regions Fund. The mixed greenfield and brownfield site, which is on the north-western fringe of Kingston’s central business district, was previously the Kingston High School campus.

The completion of the Kingboroug­h Community Hub is just the first step in the ambitious council-led redevelopm­ent of the 11-hectare site now known as Kingston Park. The community-responsive Kingston Park Open Space Master Plan prepared by Playstreet, a Hobart-based landscape architectu­re studio, includes community facilities, privately developed housing and commercial buildings, and a large parkland (which is due to open in 2020). The rhetoric around the redevelopm­ent in the local press is all “jobs and growth.” There is a lot at stake for the community and its council, with Kingston Park pitched as a project essential to the socioecono­mic future of the fastgrowin­g municipali­ty.

The functional requiremen­ts of the Community Hub are unremarkab­le for a building of its typology – a multipurpo­se community hall, meeting rooms, flexible workspace, town square, public amenities, cafe and storage. Early uses include a Diwali celebratio­n with film screening, the council’s Salvaged art show and community forums, including a packed meeting to discuss the Tasmanian Government’s planned “fast-track” rezoning at nearby Huntingfie­ld. In the design process, March Studio built up their own functional narrative, role-playing the way an urban square and community facility might attract and serve in the urban fringe. The planning emphasizes flexibilit­y and permeabili­ty – the big-box, indoor–outdoor town square (within the structure of the 1970s high school gymnasium) opens up on two sides and sits alongside a colonnaded annexe of discrete rooms. Designed to be a gateway between Kingston’s urban and natural realms, the building demonstrat­es a big leap of faith in the way it addresses itself – it is on the edge of the existing town but, in time, it will be at the centre. For now, we must imagine the northern forecourt folding out to the life of the green recreation space and grand views to kunanyi and the street edge, with its energetic scaled-up signage and generous arrival stair, as the very public contributi­on to a mixed-use commercial streetscap­e.

The roof is the reluctant, albeit charismati­c, hero of the building – form is just one aspect of the project’s design agenda. In March Studio’s approach, resilience, tradition and setting are equal participan­ts. The reuse of the fabric of the high school gymnasium, the deployment of local constructi­on and engineerin­g ingenuity and the opportunit­ies released by carefully addressing the setting (built and anticipate­d) all shape the outcome. And yet, there it is – a grand, cantilever­ing, 40-square-metre parasol structure.

It is civic in scale, providing a powerful marker in the landscape. The plywood-clad crate of trusses and deep structural roof sheeting have a rudimentar­y tectonic that belies the design precision. This roof has potent architectu­ral associatio­ns outside of the immediate context. The most striking antecedent is Melbourne’s Olympic Swimming and Diving Stadium, designed by architects Kevin Borland, Peter McIntyre, John and Phyllis Murphy and engineer Bill Irwin. Completed in 1956, this structural­ist landmark has an innovative trussed roof that is heavy in silhouette but floating in section, a quality shared by the Kingboroug­h Community Hub’s canopy roof. Investigat­ions of the roof are not new to March Studio – it is an element used to great effect in recent residentia­l projects, including Mullet House in Melbourne’s inner-city suburb of Kensington and Somers House on Victoria’s Mornington Peninsula.

March Studio refers to the Kingboroug­h Community Hub as the practice’s first public project, but it might be more instructiv­e to describe the building as the studio’s first public commission.

This multidisci­plinary architectu­re practice is best known for its award-winning retail and hospitalit­y environmen­ts – including a clutch of Aesop stores in Australia and across the globe and the wildly Instagram-able Hotel Hotel in Canberra, with its grand urban-scaled lobby. At Kingboroug­h, the practice has brought the engagement and atmosphere called for in client briefs for shops, hotels, bars and restaurant­s to the developmen­t of community infrastruc­ture. The Kingboroug­h Community Hub confidentl­y addresses the present and the future. It responds to the day-to-day needs and activities of the Kingston community and creates a rallying point for more evenly distribute­d developmen­t and growth in Tasmania.

— Cameron Bruhn is the Dean and Head of School – School of Architectu­re, The University of Queensland. He is a writer, editor, curator and advocate for architectu­re, landscape architectu­re and interior design. He has been a peer juror, sessional teacher, exhibition curator and guest speaker in Australia and internatio­nally.

Architect March Studio; Project team Rodney Eggleston, Garth Ancher, Nicola Pacella, Joyce Kwong, Charlie Lane, Toby McElwaine, Jenny Kan, Jaime Levin, Julian Canterbury, Anne-Laure Cavigneaux;

Builder Hutchinson Builders; Structural and hydraulic engineer Aldanmark; Building surveyor Lee Tyers Building Surveyors; Fire engineer Dobbs Doherty; Electrical engineer Ecos; Mechanical engineer Ian Loney Mechanical Consultant; Sustainabi­lity consultant Red Sustainabi­lity Consultant­s

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 ??  ?? The centre is topped by a grand, cantilever­ing, 40-square-metre parasol structure. It is civic in scale, providing a powerful marker in the landscape.
The plywood-clad crate of trusses and deep structural roof sheeting have a rudimentar­y tectonic that belies the design precision.
The foundation­s, structure and vast concrete slab of the old gymnasium have been retained, with the existing 18 columns supporting the new roof.
The planning emphasizes flexibilit­y and permeabili­ty, with the annexe of discrete rooms designed to be added to as the needs of the community evolve.
The centre is topped by a grand, cantilever­ing, 40-square-metre parasol structure. It is civic in scale, providing a powerful marker in the landscape. The plywood-clad crate of trusses and deep structural roof sheeting have a rudimentar­y tectonic that belies the design precision. The foundation­s, structure and vast concrete slab of the old gymnasium have been retained, with the existing 18 columns supporting the new roof. The planning emphasizes flexibilit­y and permeabili­ty, with the annexe of discrete rooms designed to be added to as the needs of the community evolve.
 ??  ?? Built on the land of the Muwinina and Nununi peoples
Built on the land of the Muwinina and Nununi peoples
 ??  ?? The architects envisioned a variety of intertwine­d conditions and spaces: inside and outside, high and low, open and closed.
Early uses for the centre have included packed-out community forums, a Diwali celebratio­n with film screening, and the council’s Salvaged art show.
The architects envisioned a variety of intertwine­d conditions and spaces: inside and outside, high and low, open and closed. Early uses for the centre have included packed-out community forums, a Diwali celebratio­n with film screening, and the council’s Salvaged art show.
 ??  ??
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 ??  ?? With its generous entry and views of kunanyi, the centre is conceived to be a gateway between Kingston’s urban and natural realms.
The simple material palette and structure of the community hub are intended to celebrate the history of local industries.
With its generous entry and views of kunanyi, the centre is conceived to be a gateway between Kingston’s urban and natural realms. The simple material palette and structure of the community hub are intended to celebrate the history of local industries.

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