Timber Building
Stairway to Venice
Published:  02 May, 2008

The auditorium can seat up to 300 people

Scottish architect Gareth Hoskins' design for a timber 'staircase' space has won the competition to be the country's first standalone pavilion at the Venice Biennale festival

Gareth Hoskins has won the competition to design Scotland's first standalone pavilion at the Venice Biennale international architecture festival.
The Glasgow-based architect saw off around 50 practices to win the prize project – part gallery/part venue for debates – dubbed the Gathering Space – although the final decision has yet to be ratified by the Scottish government.
Mr Hoskins’ vision, “the stairs as space”, proposes a construct in Venice that offers both an indoor auditorium and an external gathering space in an installation that will be constructed entirely from either sustainably-sourced or reclaimed timber.
On the outside, a set of public stairs, with seating for up to 200 people, will be used both for organized events and informal gatherings. Meanwhile the stairs form a roof that rises above the indoor auditorium - a space that is expected to seat 80-100 people.
The project has been backed by both the Lighthouse architecture centre and the Scottish government and already has a pledge of £75,000 of Scottish government cash.
Mr Hoskins said public stairs as seating has had a long tradition of being a type of informal gathering place.
“These places are vital to the urban environment,” he said. “If all the world is a stage, then the urban stair and the people who use them can be thought of as the audience.”


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