Technical

How Willmott Dixon built a cultural landmark in Tunbridge Wells

The Amelia Scott Centre has been a complex heritage and refurbishment project for Willmott Dixon Interiors, which involved joining together two existing buildings. CM reports.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CmDX923fUbI

Willmott Dixon Interiors has been building a new cultural centre in the Kent spa town of Tunbridge Wells over the past two-and-a-half years. Named after local suffragette and social reformer Amelia Scott, the project has been a complex construction operation, involving linking and refurbishing two landmark buildings, one of which is Grade II-listed.

Willmott Dixon began work on the £14m project in Tunbridge Wells town centre in January 2020. The scheme centred on a grand, four-storey library dating from 1952 and an adjacent three-storey adult education centre built in 1904, which retains many period features.

These buildings have been connected by an airy barrel-vaulted central lobby 15m high, and the interiors stripped back and refurbished. Built onto the back of the library, and helping to form a sun-capturing courtyard, is a new two-storey archive wing.

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