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The Built:East project was born out of a design competition to promote architecture, designers and makers in Belfast. Our proposal linked local heritage in the form of the Belfast Truss (which was used to make many of the factory buildings of industrial Belfast) with the heritage of making in the area. The pavilion creates an outdoor covered stopping off point and seating area along the Comber and Connswater Greenway.

  • Collaborative Project with Department for Infrastructure & Belfast City Council.

  • Wood Award Winner

    Small Project Award

Despite its small size it uses some of the most advanced manufacturing capability in Northern Ireland, with its sustainable pink-hued concrete, laser cut metal roof and CNC timber cut trusses. It links the modern manufacturing industry with the heritage of East Belfast - the subject of a socially distanced outdoor exhibition we curated with Queen’ University Belfast and which was recently displayed under the pavilion. Since the opening of the pavilion, it has also been used for bike workshops, playing music, children’s art classes, a sheltered picnic area as well as a place for walkers and cyclists to take shelter avoiding the rain. We are particularly proud of the way the pavilion is an accessible modern space which tells a story of East Belfast’s past.

Exploring how the pavilion was made has allowed us to research and work with some of the best craftspeople and manufacturers in Northern Ireland - these connections have allowed us to work with and develop and protoype the bespoke elements of our Parklet on Ormeau Road. It has also allowed us to engage with how one makes safe, good quality accessible outdoor space in a Northern Irish context. Despite its small scale it has allowed local people to tell their heritage stories through the associated exhibition. The design also allowed us to explore negotiating public space which flowed and avoided pedestrian, cycling and vehicular conflicts at the road crossing. Its unusual design has acted as a marker along the road and Greenway, drawing people to a disadvantaged part of Belfast and along with the visitor and C.S. Lewis Square helped the area regenerate. It is a good example of how good quality architecture and urban design can have impact despite its small scale.

Image Above: Belfast Trusses speaking to each other across Time

Ballyhackamore

Built:East is sited at the entrance to an extremely popular public square and therefore thousands of people have experienced the pavilion since its construction. Built: East was constructed as the gateway to C.S. Lewis Square. This is a high profile and significant location in the city: the newly constructed square is the focal point of celebrated regeneration project Connswater Community Greenway, a £40 million scheme including a new 9km linear park, wildlife corridor and flood alleviation works funded by Big Lottery Fund, Belfast City Council, the Department for Communities and Department for Infrastructure. .

Design Competition: Built: East was the winning design of the RSUA Belfast Flare pavilion competition, and the first temporary pavilion for Belfast commissioned by the RSUA and constructed in the city. It successfully established the construction of a pavilion as a biannual programme to showcase early career architects in northern Ireland (the next pavilion is due for completion summer 2021).

Exhibition: To provide opportunities for deeper engagement, OGU Architects worked with the client team’s heritage officer at the client’s request to conduct an oral histories project, talking to local residents about their memories of working in nearby factories. Exhibitiion XXX 2022. An interactive virtual tour of the pavilion and exhibition has now been permanently added to the Visitor Centre’s website.

Journal Articles

RIBA Journal (including Front Cover). The structure was visited and reviewed by the RIBA Journal editor Hugh Pearman, and appeared on the front cover of the September Issue, as well as the front cover of the RSUA Journal Perspective. It was also reviewed online by the Architects’ Journal. The accompanying exhibition was the subject of a news feature and short film by news service Belfast Live, and during the pandemic lockdown, hundreds viewed the exhibition video (filmed inside the pavilion) posted by its client EastSide Visitor Centre on social media.

Image Above: Belfast Trusses speaking to each other across Time

Cave Hill

Built:East is sited at the entrance to an extremely popular public square and therefore thousands of people have experienced the pavilion since its construction. Built: East was constructed as the gateway to C.S. Lewis Square. This is a high profile and significant location in the city: the newly constructed square is the focal point of celebrated regeneration project Connswater Community Greenway, a £40 million scheme including a new 9km linear park, wildlife corridor and flood alleviation works funded by Big Lottery Fund, Belfast City Council, the Department for Communities and Department for Infrastructure. .

Design Competition: Built: East was the winning design of the RSUA Belfast Flare pavilion competition, and the first temporary pavilion for Belfast commissioned by the RSUA and constructed in the city. It successfully established the construction of a pavilion as a biannual programme to showcase early career architects in northern Ireland (the next pavilion is due for completion summer 2021).

Exhibition: To provide opportunities for deeper engagement, OGU Architects worked with the client team’s heritage officer at the client’s request to conduct an oral histories project, talking to local residents about their memories of working in nearby factories. Exhibitiion XXX 2022. An interactive virtual tour of the pavilion and exhibition has now been permanently added to the Visitor Centre’s website.

Journal Articles

RIBA Journal (including Front Cover). The structure was visited and reviewed by the RIBA Journal editor Hugh Pearman, and appeared on the front cover of the September Issue, as well as the front cover of the RSUA Journal Perspective. It was also reviewed online by the Architects’ Journal. The accompanying exhibition was the subject of a news feature and short film by news service Belfast Live, and during the pandemic lockdown, hundreds viewed the exhibition video (filmed inside the pavilion) posted by its client EastSide Visitor Centre on social media.

Image Above: Belfast Trusses speaking to each other across Time

Despite its small size it uses some of the most advanced manufacturing capability in Northern Ireland, with its sustainable pink-hued concrete, laser cut metal roof and CNC timber cut trusses. It links the modern manufacturing industry with the heritage of East Belfast - the subject of a socially distanced outdoor exhibition we curated with Queen’ University Belfast and which was recently displayed under the pavilion. Since the opening of the pavilion, it has also been used for bike workshops, playing music, children’s art classes, a sheltered picnic area as well as a place for walkers and cyclists to take shelter avoiding the rain. We are particularly proud of the way the pavilion is an accessible modern space which tells a story of East Belfast’s past.

Exploring how the pavilion was made has allowed us to research and work with some of the best craftspeople and manufacturers in Northern Ireland - these connections have allowed us to work with and develop and protoype the bespoke elements of our Parklet on Ormeau Road. It has also allowed us to engage with how one makes safe, good quality accessible outdoor space in a Northern Irish context. Despite its small scale it has allowed local people to tell their heritage stories through the associated exhibition. The design also allowed us to explore negotiating public space which flowed and avoided pedestrian, cycling and vehicular conflicts at the road crossing. Its unusual design has acted as a marker along the road and Greenway, drawing people to a disadvantaged part of Belfast and along with the visitor and C.S. Lewis Square helped the area regenerate. It is a good example of how good quality architecture and urban design can have impact despite its small scale.

Cregagh Road

Image Above: Belfast Trusses speaking to each other across Time

Impact

Overall Small Project Winner 2022 – Judge David Morley

“The project deserves recognition for how it uses timber to positively engage the community as a flexible place to move through, meet, mend bicycles or, initially, to hold an exhibition to remind the community of its heritage.”

Built:East is sited at the entrance to an extremely popular public square and therefore thousands of people have experienced the pavilion since its construction. Built: East was constructed as the gateway to C.S. Lewis Square. This is a high profile and significant location in the city: the newly constructed square is the focal point of celebrated regeneration project Connswater Community Greenway, a £40 million scheme including a new 9km linear park, wildlife corridor and flood alleviation works funded by Big Lottery Fund, Belfast City Council, the Department for Communities and Department for Infrastructure. .

Design Competition: Built: East was the winning design of the RSUA Belfast Flare pavilion competition, and the first temporary pavilion for Belfast commissioned by the RSUA and constructed in the city. It successfully established the construction of a pavilion as a biannual programme to showcase early career architects in northern Ireland (the next pavilion is due for completion summer 2021).

Exhibition: To provide opportunities for deeper engagement, OGU Architects worked with the client team’s heritage officer at the client’s request to conduct an oral histories project, talking to local residents about their memories of working in nearby factories. Exhibitiion XXX 2022. An interactive virtual tour of the pavilion and exhibition has now been permanently added to the Visitor Centre’s website.

Journal Articles

RIBA Journal (including Front Cover). The structure was visited and reviewed by the RIBA Journal editor Hugh Pearman, and appeared on the front cover of the September Issue, as well as the front cover of the RSUA Journal Perspective. It was also reviewed online by the Architects’ Journal. The accompanying exhibition was the subject of a news feature and short film by news service Belfast Live, and during the pandemic lockdown, hundreds viewed the exhibition video (filmed inside the pavilion) posted by its client EastSide Visitor Centre on social media.

Perspective Magazine

Lectures

Xxxxxx Queens University Belfast

Timber Development Association Lecture 2022

The pavilion was the topic of two invited talks at Belfast Design Week 2019.

Sustainability

Xxxxx xxxx xxxxxxx

Process

From the creation of some of the world’s most famous ships to the invention of ejector seats, Northern Ireland innovates and sends ideas out into the world. We wish to celebrate and advertise this with reference to the industrial architecture that has made such achievements possible. In particular, we reference an architectural innovation originating in the city: the Belfast Truss. We were inspired by the barrel-vaulted industrial and station architectures of the 19th century, whose exquisite ceilings far surpass their basic duty to provide shelter. The warmth of the timber combined with the delicacy of the structural elements create spaces that are incredibly beautiful. On top of this formal beauty is an elegant attitude to resources: the Belfast trusses were made from the leftover wood from the boat-building industry as they only required short timber sections. At the time this made economic sense as timber was largely imported to Belfast from overseas. Now of course it resonates with an ethical attitude to the earth’s finite resources as we look to find ways of building that contribute to reducing the industry’s carbon footprint. By using the same latticed structure made up of short sections, Built: East could largely be made from the timber offcuts of the construction and furniture industries, reducing the environmental impact and cost of the build.

The ad-hoc flexibility at ground level of Built: East combined with its tall and open volume invites continual rearrangement and adjustment to suit the requirements of the school trips, street food festivals, theatre groups, craft workshops, musical performances, yoga classes, film screenings and as yet unimagined happenings that we hope will occupy the pavilion. The proposed structure incorporates timber elements that require various levels of skill to create. While the undulating floor plane can be put together by a relatively unskilled team of enthusiastic participants, the frame requires a higher level of building expertise, and the truss roof demands the involvement of skilled craftsmen. For this reason it is hoped that the structure can result from the collaboration of community and student groups without taking away work from professional craftspeople. Creating an opportunity for enthusiasts to learn from Belfast’s most skilled makers puts into action the core principle of Built: East to elevate and advertise the city’s creativity.

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