Logo Back
Projects
• 07 Jul, 2021

A new workplace at the heart of The National Gallery

Purcell has created a unified office space for the entire gallery staff within previously redundant, confined and underused spaces nestled between and beneath the exhibition halls of the nation’s art collection.

This refurbishment has included the conversion of two remaining lightwells and adjacent spaces at basement and ground floor in the 1870’s E.M Barry extension.

It has created eight floors – over 40,000 square feet – of commercial office space designed to enhance collaboration, communication and community between over 250 gallery staff, uniting departments previously scattered across the sprawling main buildings on Trafalgar Square and Orange Street.

'We’re looking forward to seeing how the client will now inhabit the new office spaces and realise the original concept; of establishing a collaborative and inter-connected workplace that enhances the well-being and productivity of the staff community.'

– Robin Flindell, Associate, Purcell

Infrastructure designed to enhance collaborative working and connection between staff – warm desks, breakout spaces, conference and meeting rooms – is reinforced by views and visual links created by open balconies across lightwells and reopened, repaired low-level windows.

The commercially viable and sustainable workspace was first conceived of years before flexible working entered the mainstream agenda during COVID-19, beginning on site in 2019 and completing in Spring 2021.

It is designed to champion communication and collaboration across teams, as well as freeing up space across the site for future development, in line with the client’s longer-term masterplan.

In a fitting tribute to the original ‘back of house’ area, the team exposed the new services in the historic spaces. These works depended upon high level collaboration between us and the services sub-contractor throughout the site phase.

Extensive natural light and open space characterize both lightwells; each infilled and capped by glass rooflights.

The first creates an informal meeting space, cafeteria and atrium, reintroducing the previously forgotten but dramatic view of the Portland Stone clad Belvedere Tower to the interior and creating a grand sense of place and identity for the gallery staff.

The second has five, open balconied floors of warm desk spaces, collaboration areas and bookable rooms, centred around one, unifying lightwell. The further top two floors include a shared space for gallery staff, with expansive views across Trafalgar Square and towards the London Eye.

These two unique and distinct lightwells are connected by reconfigured and refurbished ground and basement floors which deliver further meeting and office space in previously under-utilised storage areas.