Since flames tore through听迟丑别 Glasgow School of Art鈥檚 Charles Rennie Mackintosh-designed home, a national conversation is ongoing about whether the celebrated building should be rebuilt.
鈥淢ackintosh鈥檚 Glasgow School of Art is gone,鈥澛犅燝lasgow-based architect Alan Dunlop on the 鈥渋rreparable鈥 damage to the iconic Sauchiehall Street structure. Experts have put the cost of rebuilding the ravaged 鈥淢ack鈥 at聽, while design guru Stephen Bayley聽聽that an innovative new design would be preferable to a 鈥渓ame duck reproduction鈥. Meanwhile, 罢丑别听罢颈尘别蝉鈥 letters pages have been filled with calls to restore the celebrated building at any cost, a view endorsed by many Glaswegians and supporters across the world.
The overwhelming concern for the future of the Mackintosh indicates that it is not just another university building, said Tom Inns, the art school鈥檚 director.
鈥淚t鈥檚 understandable because so many people have a relationship with it 鈥 students, staff and residents of Glasgow love it, while others have a link through the work of Mackintosh,鈥 he told 探花视频.
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鈥淚t鈥檚 always been an incredible building, not just because it was designed for a purpose or the activity that has taken place within it 鈥 it鈥檚 a combination of the two.鈥
Professor Inns had just returned home from a graduation ceremony and was sitting with a cup of cocoa when he heard the news of the fire, which struck just months before a 拢32 million restoration was due to be completed following a blaze in 2014.
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鈥淭his fire has had a much bigger impact on the school than it did in 2014,鈥 said Professor Inns, who had just taken over the school when the first fire hit.
Some 60 local residents evacuated from nearby homes still have nowhere to live, while the fire also spread to the O2 ABC music venue, delivering a huge blow to local businesses. Sections of Sauchiehall Street are now closed off while parts of the Mack are dismantled, Inns explained. 鈥淚t鈥檚 normally a very lively street,鈥 he said.
Professor Inns has, however, confirmed that the Mack will be rebuilt. 鈥淚t is as vital a part of the Glasgow School of Art鈥檚 future as it has been for the past 100 years,鈥 he said, adding that the Mack would 鈥渃ontinue to provide creative inspiration to students, staff and visitors鈥.
鈥淭he Mackintosh Building will be rebuilt and will be a working art school,鈥 he insisted, adding that 鈥渨e have never underestimated its importance in terms of influencing the creative practice of those who work in it, nor the affection in which it is held by Glasgow.鈥
It is too soon to say when the Mack might return (鈥渁s quickly as possible鈥, said Professor Inns), with聽contractors聽still assessing the extent of the damage, but attention is now firmly on ensuring that university life continues as smoothly as possible for students. While the Mack itself had not yet been returned to action following the 2014 fire, the visitor centre, shop and exhibition spaces at its nearby Reid building have been closed, as have other teaching spaces.
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鈥淲e鈥檙e expecting a very different and busy summer,鈥 admitted Professor Inns of the extra work needed to secure alternative space and technical equipment so that studies are not interrupted.
鈥淲e have about 400 postgraduates who will want to study through to summer and about 1,500 open studio students here in the summer months, so we鈥檝e been looking at keeping continuity without two of our core buildings,鈥 he said.
With exhibition space containing student work cordoned off for weeks, the school鈥檚 400 staff have already had to get creative to mitigate the impact on students, Professor Inns added.
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鈥淭he majority of student work due to go down to the London聽design聽shows was inaccessible, but we managed to provide some form of exhibition by using digital images of their work,鈥 he explained. 鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 the same as the real thing, but at least students had a presence there.鈥
鈥淭his is a really big thing for a small institution to handle, but we are pulling together,鈥 Professor Inns continued, adding that he was also 鈥渕indful of staff fatigue and how we support staff as we are losing the summer鈥 normally spent on research and teaching preparations.
Questions about how the fire started have still yet to be answered, although Inns pointed out that new sprinklers were not working 鈥渂ecause they were being installed鈥 when the blaze broke out. 鈥淭he building had not been handed back to us and we鈥檇 received the assurances you鈥檇 expect,鈥 he said.
Whether another multimillion-pound fundraising campaign is needed 鈥 the last one was backed by Hollywood actor Brad Pitt 鈥 is unclear, but Professor Inns was confident that existing insurance will cover it. 鈥淚t will require a lot of resource, but that is why you have full building insurance,鈥 he said.
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POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline: Glasgow School of Art aims for normality in extraordinary times
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