Engine Shed, University of Lincoln

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Architecture

Building developer: University of Lincoln
Architect: University of Lincoln Architects
Consultant: Siteco Ltd
Installer: Bellmarsh
Location: Lincoln, Brayford Campus
Country: United Kingdom
Year of construction: 2006

Lighting

Customised Lunis R
Bespoke Chandeliers
Colour LED Feature Box

The latest addition to the University of Lincoln's thriving campus at Brayford Pool is the £6 million restoration of the Engine Shed.  Constructed in 1874 by Great Northern Railways, the Engine Shed is the only surviving four-track dead-end railway building in Lincolnshire. Disused since the 1960s, the building has been transformed into a dynamic new Students' Union centre and Lincoln's biggest live music venue.

The new facility forms the social heart of the university campus. The building has transformed nightlife in Lincoln beyond all recognition, both for students and the public.  Many features of the original structure have been retained and restored. They are complemented by bold modern extensions which embrace the historic character of the building. Internally, the bars combine '50s retro styling and carry the railway analogy throughout. By night, the lighting continues this theme, accentuating the impressive balance of old and new.

Reclaimed fittings from the original Victorian structure sit at ease with modern Siteco luminaires and bespoke chandeliers.  Both subtle and bold lighting techniques are employed to enhance the historic features of the building. Most dramatic is the addition of the colour-shifting light box atop the building: a modern icon for Lincoln and the Engine Shed which draws direct historic reference from the building's original water tower.


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