London Metropolitan University graduate Charlotte Wilson was awarded Best in Show at London graduate show
FreeRange this year for her proposal to convert a bunker into a museum.
The existing RAF Bempton bunker in Yorkshire, UK is built into a
cliff-side and would be be transformed into a museum celebrating the
role of women during war.
The bunker would be dug out in areas to reveal its three metre-thick walls and create a series of courtyards open to the air.
A glazed roof over one section would have water flowing over it and
down a wall etched with the names of pivotal women from past wars.
Part of the bunker would protrude out of the cliff to create a viewing platform over the sea.
Here’s some more from Wilson:
“Situated within a unique cliff side location in Bempton lies the
RAF Bempton bunker. Disintegrating and of great historical interest, it
is proposed the site will be sensitively renovated and reclaimed.
‘Women . War . Peace’ will be a new and exciting war museum with the
pure focus of Women and War. Journeying through the exhibition will
illustrate the compassion, realism, horrors and bravery seen and felt
through the eyes of women during war time, both on the front-line and
behind the scenes. This museum interrogates the creativity of
learning through emotional and experiential spaces and details.
By breaking out of the bunker from it’s central pit space, the
architectural language conveys the juxtaposition between the protective
shell of the bunker and it’s contrasting dangerous subject matter.
Through this process the bunker’s thick 3.3 metre walls are revealed
and with this, external underground courtyards are created, allowing
for pause and contemplation throughout the experience. The whole
experience will be of constant enlightenment, with natural light
increasingly puncturing underground and views being progressively
exposed.
The bunker accommodates four main stages, Past, Present, Reflection and Remembrance;
Past. The main Exhibition Space is located within and around the
bunker with the focused narrative being of the two different stories of
‘Women at War’ (situated within the bunkers walls) and ‘Women at Home’
(breaking out of the bunker to create new spaces). This gives the idea
of the Women at Home being ‘Behind the Scenes’ and supporting the Women
at War.
This experience will house the stories of Women from 1914 to 2000
through interactive stations, silo spaces and archived resources with
the experience being of an intimate nature. At the heart of the
exhibition is an interactive time line structure which contains an
immersive eerie environment within it’s walls reminding the visitor of
‘absence’. This structure is impertive as a collective point and a
place to delve deeper into the information.
Present. This experience takes place within the Souterrain and
courtyard spaces and is dedicated to the stories of women of war from
2000 to the present day. Water flows along a glazed roof and
enters into the space flowing down a wall, etched with the names of
admirable Women, before the tunnel punctures through the cliff
face to reveal a viewing platform over the sea.
Reflection and Remembrance. This viewing platform allows for the
visitor to reflect over the information gleaned whilst looking out
to sea. As this space is partially exposed, visitors will begin
to feel a sense of freedom as they listen to the birds song.
Future. After ascending back up to ground level, the visitor is
able to look back on underground spaces with a new perspective
as they wonder freely back along the site. A proposed viewing
platform will rise into the sky, allowing a view over the
explosive narrative of the site.”
from archdaily