acme
ACME is a design-led, international architecture practice
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🥬 Salat auf dem Dach, Zukunft im Markt.
Nach 420 Tagen ist es so weit: Heute eröffnen wir unseren REWE Green Farming Markt in Berlin-Lankwitz mit Deutschlands größter Dachfarm. Zusammen mit Felix Thomas, unserem Kaufmann im Kiez, viel Erfolg dir!
Was lange Vision war, ist jetzt Realität. Ein kreislauffähiger Supermarkt in Holzbauweise, der ressourcenschonendes Bauen und urbane Lebensmittelproduktion miteinander verbindet. Unten kaufen unsere Kundinnen und Kunden ein – oben wächst ab Sommer frischer Lankwitzer Pflücksalat.
Die Fakten sprechen für sich:
🌲 1.800 Kubikmeter heimische Nadelhölzer wurden verbaut.
🪵 72 Säulen aus gestapelten Hölzern tragen die luftige Markthalle.
🔄 Modulare Holzbauweise: Alle Hölzer können demontiert und erneut genutzt werden.
💦 Auf dem Dach entsteht eine hochmoderne Hydroponik-Farm nahezu ohne Erde.
🥗 Ab Sommer wachsen hier jährlich bis zu 900.000 Salatmischungen. Text: REWE UK Stephanie Behrens Video:@pivopix #Berlin #Lankwitz #Salat #rewe

REWE Green Farming in Berlin-Lankwitz opens its doors to the public today!
We are thrilled to mark this milestone in our ongoing collaboration with REWE Group - 10 years going strong. They are such an ambitious client, shaping the future of supermarkets, and this Berlin market is just the beginning.
This building follows on from the success of REWE Green Farming, Wiesbaden, the prototype store completed in 2021.
Key facts about REWE Green Farming Berlin-Lankwitz:
🌲 1,800 cubic meters of local softwood were used in the construction.
🪵 72 stacked wooden columns support the airy market hall.
🔄 Modular timber construction: All the wood can be dismantled and reused.
Germany's largest rooftop farm (2,760 m²)
💦 A state-of-the-art hydroponic farm, requiring virtually no soil, is being built on the roof.
🥬 From Summer 2026, up to 900,000 heads of lettuce will be grown here annually.
Energy from 100% green electricity, waste heat recovery and c.200 solar panels
Award winner: "Climate Protection Partner Berlin 2025" awarded by the Chamber of Industry and Commerce
Congratulations to all involved at @rewe_group, @acmespace , @ecf_farmsystems, CS Architekten, Dreßler Bau GmbH, Schöne Neue Welt Ingenieure, PSM, Ingenieurbüro für Tiefbau Noack, Holzbau Amann GmbH, e² energieberatung GmbH, Natur+Text, ++.
#Berlin #Timberconstruction #Urbanfarming
Photography: Christoph Große / ACME
Berliners, we'd encourage you to visit the store: Malteserstraße 136, 12249 Berlin-Lankwitz, Germany

REWE Green Farming in Berlin-Lankwitz opens its doors to the public today!
We are thrilled to mark this milestone in our ongoing collaboration with REWE Group - 10 years going strong. They are such an ambitious client, shaping the future of supermarkets, and this Berlin market is just the beginning.
This building follows on from the success of REWE Green Farming, Wiesbaden, the prototype store completed in 2021.
Key facts about REWE Green Farming Berlin-Lankwitz:
🌲 1,800 cubic meters of local softwood were used in the construction.
🪵 72 stacked wooden columns support the airy market hall.
🔄 Modular timber construction: All the wood can be dismantled and reused.
Germany's largest rooftop farm (2,760 m²)
💦 A state-of-the-art hydroponic farm, requiring virtually no soil, is being built on the roof.
🥬 From Summer 2026, up to 900,000 heads of lettuce will be grown here annually.
Energy from 100% green electricity, waste heat recovery and c.200 solar panels
Award winner: "Climate Protection Partner Berlin 2025" awarded by the Chamber of Industry and Commerce
Congratulations to all involved at @rewe_group, @acmespace , @ecf_farmsystems, CS Architekten, Dreßler Bau GmbH, Schöne Neue Welt Ingenieure, PSM, Ingenieurbüro für Tiefbau Noack, Holzbau Amann GmbH, e² energieberatung GmbH, Natur+Text, ++.
#Berlin #Timberconstruction #Urbanfarming
Photography: Christoph Große / ACME
Berliners, we'd encourage you to visit the store: Malteserstraße 136, 12249 Berlin-Lankwitz, Germany

REWE Green Farming in Berlin-Lankwitz opens its doors to the public today!
We are thrilled to mark this milestone in our ongoing collaboration with REWE Group - 10 years going strong. They are such an ambitious client, shaping the future of supermarkets, and this Berlin market is just the beginning.
This building follows on from the success of REWE Green Farming, Wiesbaden, the prototype store completed in 2021.
Key facts about REWE Green Farming Berlin-Lankwitz:
🌲 1,800 cubic meters of local softwood were used in the construction.
🪵 72 stacked wooden columns support the airy market hall.
🔄 Modular timber construction: All the wood can be dismantled and reused.
Germany's largest rooftop farm (2,760 m²)
💦 A state-of-the-art hydroponic farm, requiring virtually no soil, is being built on the roof.
🥬 From Summer 2026, up to 900,000 heads of lettuce will be grown here annually.
Energy from 100% green electricity, waste heat recovery and c.200 solar panels
Award winner: "Climate Protection Partner Berlin 2025" awarded by the Chamber of Industry and Commerce
Congratulations to all involved at @rewe_group, @acmespace , @ecf_farmsystems, CS Architekten, Dreßler Bau GmbH, Schöne Neue Welt Ingenieure, PSM, Ingenieurbüro für Tiefbau Noack, Holzbau Amann GmbH, e² energieberatung GmbH, Natur+Text, ++.
#Berlin #Timberconstruction #Urbanfarming
Photography: Christoph Große / ACME
Berliners, we'd encourage you to visit the store: Malteserstraße 136, 12249 Berlin-Lankwitz, Germany

REWE Green Farming in Berlin-Lankwitz opens its doors to the public today!
We are thrilled to mark this milestone in our ongoing collaboration with REWE Group - 10 years going strong. They are such an ambitious client, shaping the future of supermarkets, and this Berlin market is just the beginning.
This building follows on from the success of REWE Green Farming, Wiesbaden, the prototype store completed in 2021.
Key facts about REWE Green Farming Berlin-Lankwitz:
🌲 1,800 cubic meters of local softwood were used in the construction.
🪵 72 stacked wooden columns support the airy market hall.
🔄 Modular timber construction: All the wood can be dismantled and reused.
Germany's largest rooftop farm (2,760 m²)
💦 A state-of-the-art hydroponic farm, requiring virtually no soil, is being built on the roof.
🥬 From Summer 2026, up to 900,000 heads of lettuce will be grown here annually.
Energy from 100% green electricity, waste heat recovery and c.200 solar panels
Award winner: "Climate Protection Partner Berlin 2025" awarded by the Chamber of Industry and Commerce
Congratulations to all involved at @rewe_group, @acmespace , @ecf_farmsystems, CS Architekten, Dreßler Bau GmbH, Schöne Neue Welt Ingenieure, PSM, Ingenieurbüro für Tiefbau Noack, Holzbau Amann GmbH, e² energieberatung GmbH, Natur+Text, ++.
#Berlin #Timberconstruction #Urbanfarming
Photography: Christoph Große / ACME
Berliners, we'd encourage you to visit the store: Malteserstraße 136, 12249 Berlin-Lankwitz, Germany

REWE Green Farming in Berlin-Lankwitz opens its doors to the public today!
We are thrilled to mark this milestone in our ongoing collaboration with REWE Group - 10 years going strong. They are such an ambitious client, shaping the future of supermarkets, and this Berlin market is just the beginning.
This building follows on from the success of REWE Green Farming, Wiesbaden, the prototype store completed in 2021.
Key facts about REWE Green Farming Berlin-Lankwitz:
🌲 1,800 cubic meters of local softwood were used in the construction.
🪵 72 stacked wooden columns support the airy market hall.
🔄 Modular timber construction: All the wood can be dismantled and reused.
Germany's largest rooftop farm (2,760 m²)
💦 A state-of-the-art hydroponic farm, requiring virtually no soil, is being built on the roof.
🥬 From Summer 2026, up to 900,000 heads of lettuce will be grown here annually.
Energy from 100% green electricity, waste heat recovery and c.200 solar panels
Award winner: "Climate Protection Partner Berlin 2025" awarded by the Chamber of Industry and Commerce
Congratulations to all involved at @rewe_group, @acmespace , @ecf_farmsystems, CS Architekten, Dreßler Bau GmbH, Schöne Neue Welt Ingenieure, PSM, Ingenieurbüro für Tiefbau Noack, Holzbau Amann GmbH, e² energieberatung GmbH, Natur+Text, ++.
#Berlin #Timberconstruction #Urbanfarming
Photography: Christoph Große / ACME
Berliners, we'd encourage you to visit the store: Malteserstraße 136, 12249 Berlin-Lankwitz, Germany

ACME London is seeking exceptional designers for the following roles:
▪️ Senior Interior Architect
▪️ Interior Architectural Designers
To apply send your CV, portfolio, and a short note introducing yourself to hr-london@acme.ac or follow the link in our bio 🔗
We look forward to hearing from you!
#spacexacme #hiring #jobsinlondon #architect #designer

ACME London is seeking exceptional designers for the following roles:
▪️ Senior Interior Architect
▪️ Interior Architectural Designers
To apply send your CV, portfolio, and a short note introducing yourself to hr-london@acme.ac or follow the link in our bio 🔗
We look forward to hearing from you!
#spacexacme #hiring #jobsinlondon #architect #designer

ACME London is seeking exceptional designers for the following roles:
▪️ Senior Interior Architect
▪️ Interior Architectural Designers
To apply send your CV, portfolio, and a short note introducing yourself to hr-london@acme.ac or follow the link in our bio 🔗
We look forward to hearing from you!
#spacexacme #hiring #jobsinlondon #architect #designer

ACME London is seeking exceptional designers for the following roles:
▪️ Senior Interior Architect
▪️ Interior Architectural Designers
To apply send your CV, portfolio, and a short note introducing yourself to hr-london@acme.ac or follow the link in our bio 🔗
We look forward to hearing from you!
#spacexacme #hiring #jobsinlondon #architect #designer

We took part in ‘Bake the World a Better Place’ in support of the Architects Benevolent Society (ABS). Our morning was brightened with a selection of freshly prepared treats, helping to raise both awareness and funds for ABS.
The Architects Benevolent Society provides confidential advice, support and financial assistance to members of the architectural community and their families during times of need.
Many thanks to this year’s bakers for the multicultural spread (England 🇬🇧, Iran 🇮🇷, South Africa 🇿🇦 & Italy 🇮🇹)
@archbensoc
#mentalhealthawarenessweek #baketheworld #mentalhealth

We took part in ‘Bake the World a Better Place’ in support of the Architects Benevolent Society (ABS). Our morning was brightened with a selection of freshly prepared treats, helping to raise both awareness and funds for ABS.
The Architects Benevolent Society provides confidential advice, support and financial assistance to members of the architectural community and their families during times of need.
Many thanks to this year’s bakers for the multicultural spread (England 🇬🇧, Iran 🇮🇷, South Africa 🇿🇦 & Italy 🇮🇹)
@archbensoc
#mentalhealthawarenessweek #baketheworld #mentalhealth

We took part in ‘Bake the World a Better Place’ in support of the Architects Benevolent Society (ABS). Our morning was brightened with a selection of freshly prepared treats, helping to raise both awareness and funds for ABS.
The Architects Benevolent Society provides confidential advice, support and financial assistance to members of the architectural community and their families during times of need.
Many thanks to this year’s bakers for the multicultural spread (England 🇬🇧, Iran 🇮🇷, South Africa 🇿🇦 & Italy 🇮🇹)
@archbensoc
#mentalhealthawarenessweek #baketheworld #mentalhealth

We took part in ‘Bake the World a Better Place’ in support of the Architects Benevolent Society (ABS). Our morning was brightened with a selection of freshly prepared treats, helping to raise both awareness and funds for ABS.
The Architects Benevolent Society provides confidential advice, support and financial assistance to members of the architectural community and their families during times of need.
Many thanks to this year’s bakers for the multicultural spread (England 🇬🇧, Iran 🇮🇷, South Africa 🇿🇦 & Italy 🇮🇹)
@archbensoc
#mentalhealthawarenessweek #baketheworld #mentalhealth

ACME Madrid is looking for experienced Architects & Architectural Designers to join their team!
For more information and to apply, follow the link in our bio 🔗
#spacexacme #madrid #spain #hiring #architect designer jobs

ACME Madrid is looking for experienced Architects & Architectural Designers to join their team!
For more information and to apply, follow the link in our bio 🔗
#spacexacme #madrid #spain #hiring #architect designer jobs

ACME Madrid is looking for experienced Architects & Architectural Designers to join their team!
For more information and to apply, follow the link in our bio 🔗
#spacexacme #madrid #spain #hiring #architect designer jobs

Amanda Callaghan and Lana Fattah will be representing ACME’s Sustainability Task Group at this year’s @footprintplus taking place 13–14 May.
FOOTPRINT+ brings together forward-thinking professionals for two days of talks, exhibitions and discussions exploring the sustainability challenges facing the property industry today.
We hope to see you there to learn, connect and be inspired 🌱
#FP26 #footprintplus #london #architecture #sustainability

Amanda Callaghan and Lana Fattah will be representing ACME’s Sustainability Task Group at this year’s @footprintplus taking place 13–14 May.
FOOTPRINT+ brings together forward-thinking professionals for two days of talks, exhibitions and discussions exploring the sustainability challenges facing the property industry today.
We hope to see you there to learn, connect and be inspired 🌱
#FP26 #footprintplus #london #architecture #sustainability

Folkestone E, Folkestone Seafront
Folkestone is a coastal town overlooking the English Channel. Historically, it has been a significant fishing and ferry port, as well as a spa resort. Boats, railways, amusement piers, bathing establishments, roller coasters, mini golf and nightclubs characterised the seafront.
For the last 20 years, the site has mainly been used for truck parking.
The Folkestone Harbour and Seafront masterplan aims to revitalise the area by creating new waterfront homes.
Folkestone E is a five-story apartment block that sits along Marine Parade. It rotates and drops its massing to four and three storeys along the beachfront to maximise sea and harbour views.
Pixelation of the overall form provides variation across the façade, featuring generous inset balconies and winter gardens.
Every unit has generous outdoor spaces, mostly facing the sea, and the use of the raised communal garden, situated within the crescent, sheltered from sea winds. Facades are made from glazed ceramic tiles, designed to withstand the harsh marine environment and align with the common architectural language across the Seafront masterplan.
#spacexacme #architecture #design #Folkestone #archilovers residential

Folkestone E, Folkestone Seafront
Folkestone is a coastal town overlooking the English Channel. Historically, it has been a significant fishing and ferry port, as well as a spa resort. Boats, railways, amusement piers, bathing establishments, roller coasters, mini golf and nightclubs characterised the seafront.
For the last 20 years, the site has mainly been used for truck parking.
The Folkestone Harbour and Seafront masterplan aims to revitalise the area by creating new waterfront homes.
Folkestone E is a five-story apartment block that sits along Marine Parade. It rotates and drops its massing to four and three storeys along the beachfront to maximise sea and harbour views.
Pixelation of the overall form provides variation across the façade, featuring generous inset balconies and winter gardens.
Every unit has generous outdoor spaces, mostly facing the sea, and the use of the raised communal garden, situated within the crescent, sheltered from sea winds. Facades are made from glazed ceramic tiles, designed to withstand the harsh marine environment and align with the common architectural language across the Seafront masterplan.
#spacexacme #architecture #design #Folkestone #archilovers residential

Folkestone E, Folkestone Seafront
Folkestone is a coastal town overlooking the English Channel. Historically, it has been a significant fishing and ferry port, as well as a spa resort. Boats, railways, amusement piers, bathing establishments, roller coasters, mini golf and nightclubs characterised the seafront.
For the last 20 years, the site has mainly been used for truck parking.
The Folkestone Harbour and Seafront masterplan aims to revitalise the area by creating new waterfront homes.
Folkestone E is a five-story apartment block that sits along Marine Parade. It rotates and drops its massing to four and three storeys along the beachfront to maximise sea and harbour views.
Pixelation of the overall form provides variation across the façade, featuring generous inset balconies and winter gardens.
Every unit has generous outdoor spaces, mostly facing the sea, and the use of the raised communal garden, situated within the crescent, sheltered from sea winds. Facades are made from glazed ceramic tiles, designed to withstand the harsh marine environment and align with the common architectural language across the Seafront masterplan.
#spacexacme #architecture #design #Folkestone #archilovers residential

Folkestone E, Folkestone Seafront
Folkestone is a coastal town overlooking the English Channel. Historically, it has been a significant fishing and ferry port, as well as a spa resort. Boats, railways, amusement piers, bathing establishments, roller coasters, mini golf and nightclubs characterised the seafront.
For the last 20 years, the site has mainly been used for truck parking.
The Folkestone Harbour and Seafront masterplan aims to revitalise the area by creating new waterfront homes.
Folkestone E is a five-story apartment block that sits along Marine Parade. It rotates and drops its massing to four and three storeys along the beachfront to maximise sea and harbour views.
Pixelation of the overall form provides variation across the façade, featuring generous inset balconies and winter gardens.
Every unit has generous outdoor spaces, mostly facing the sea, and the use of the raised communal garden, situated within the crescent, sheltered from sea winds. Facades are made from glazed ceramic tiles, designed to withstand the harsh marine environment and align with the common architectural language across the Seafront masterplan.
#spacexacme #architecture #design #Folkestone #archilovers residential

Folkestone E, Folkestone Seafront
Folkestone is a coastal town overlooking the English Channel. Historically, it has been a significant fishing and ferry port, as well as a spa resort. Boats, railways, amusement piers, bathing establishments, roller coasters, mini golf and nightclubs characterised the seafront.
For the last 20 years, the site has mainly been used for truck parking.
The Folkestone Harbour and Seafront masterplan aims to revitalise the area by creating new waterfront homes.
Folkestone E is a five-story apartment block that sits along Marine Parade. It rotates and drops its massing to four and three storeys along the beachfront to maximise sea and harbour views.
Pixelation of the overall form provides variation across the façade, featuring generous inset balconies and winter gardens.
Every unit has generous outdoor spaces, mostly facing the sea, and the use of the raised communal garden, situated within the crescent, sheltered from sea winds. Facades are made from glazed ceramic tiles, designed to withstand the harsh marine environment and align with the common architectural language across the Seafront masterplan.
#spacexacme #architecture #design #Folkestone #archilovers residential

Folkestone E, Folkestone Seafront
Folkestone is a coastal town overlooking the English Channel. Historically, it has been a significant fishing and ferry port, as well as a spa resort. Boats, railways, amusement piers, bathing establishments, roller coasters, mini golf and nightclubs characterised the seafront.
For the last 20 years, the site has mainly been used for truck parking.
The Folkestone Harbour and Seafront masterplan aims to revitalise the area by creating new waterfront homes.
Folkestone E is a five-story apartment block that sits along Marine Parade. It rotates and drops its massing to four and three storeys along the beachfront to maximise sea and harbour views.
Pixelation of the overall form provides variation across the façade, featuring generous inset balconies and winter gardens.
Every unit has generous outdoor spaces, mostly facing the sea, and the use of the raised communal garden, situated within the crescent, sheltered from sea winds. Facades are made from glazed ceramic tiles, designed to withstand the harsh marine environment and align with the common architectural language across the Seafront masterplan.
#spacexacme #architecture #design #Folkestone #archilovers residential

Folkestone E, Folkestone Seafront
Folkestone is a coastal town overlooking the English Channel. Historically, it has been a significant fishing and ferry port, as well as a spa resort. Boats, railways, amusement piers, bathing establishments, roller coasters, mini golf and nightclubs characterised the seafront.
For the last 20 years, the site has mainly been used for truck parking.
The Folkestone Harbour and Seafront masterplan aims to revitalise the area by creating new waterfront homes.
Folkestone E is a five-story apartment block that sits along Marine Parade. It rotates and drops its massing to four and three storeys along the beachfront to maximise sea and harbour views.
Pixelation of the overall form provides variation across the façade, featuring generous inset balconies and winter gardens.
Every unit has generous outdoor spaces, mostly facing the sea, and the use of the raised communal garden, situated within the crescent, sheltered from sea winds. Facades are made from glazed ceramic tiles, designed to withstand the harsh marine environment and align with the common architectural language across the Seafront masterplan.
#spacexacme #architecture #design #Folkestone #archilovers residential

Folkestone E, Folkestone Seafront
Folkestone is a coastal town overlooking the English Channel. Historically, it has been a significant fishing and ferry port, as well as a spa resort. Boats, railways, amusement piers, bathing establishments, roller coasters, mini golf and nightclubs characterised the seafront.
For the last 20 years, the site has mainly been used for truck parking.
The Folkestone Harbour and Seafront masterplan aims to revitalise the area by creating new waterfront homes.
Folkestone E is a five-story apartment block that sits along Marine Parade. It rotates and drops its massing to four and three storeys along the beachfront to maximise sea and harbour views.
Pixelation of the overall form provides variation across the façade, featuring generous inset balconies and winter gardens.
Every unit has generous outdoor spaces, mostly facing the sea, and the use of the raised communal garden, situated within the crescent, sheltered from sea winds. Facades are made from glazed ceramic tiles, designed to withstand the harsh marine environment and align with the common architectural language across the Seafront masterplan.
#spacexacme #architecture #design #Folkestone #archilovers residential

Folkestone E, Folkestone Seafront
Folkestone is a coastal town overlooking the English Channel. Historically, it has been a significant fishing and ferry port, as well as a spa resort. Boats, railways, amusement piers, bathing establishments, roller coasters, mini golf and nightclubs characterised the seafront.
For the last 20 years, the site has mainly been used for truck parking.
The Folkestone Harbour and Seafront masterplan aims to revitalise the area by creating new waterfront homes.
Folkestone E is a five-story apartment block that sits along Marine Parade. It rotates and drops its massing to four and three storeys along the beachfront to maximise sea and harbour views.
Pixelation of the overall form provides variation across the façade, featuring generous inset balconies and winter gardens.
Every unit has generous outdoor spaces, mostly facing the sea, and the use of the raised communal garden, situated within the crescent, sheltered from sea winds. Facades are made from glazed ceramic tiles, designed to withstand the harsh marine environment and align with the common architectural language across the Seafront masterplan.
#spacexacme #architecture #design #Folkestone #archilovers residential

Folkestone E, Folkestone Seafront
Folkestone is a coastal town overlooking the English Channel. Historically, it has been a significant fishing and ferry port, as well as a spa resort. Boats, railways, amusement piers, bathing establishments, roller coasters, mini golf and nightclubs characterised the seafront.
For the last 20 years, the site has mainly been used for truck parking.
The Folkestone Harbour and Seafront masterplan aims to revitalise the area by creating new waterfront homes.
Folkestone E is a five-story apartment block that sits along Marine Parade. It rotates and drops its massing to four and three storeys along the beachfront to maximise sea and harbour views.
Pixelation of the overall form provides variation across the façade, featuring generous inset balconies and winter gardens.
Every unit has generous outdoor spaces, mostly facing the sea, and the use of the raised communal garden, situated within the crescent, sheltered from sea winds. Facades are made from glazed ceramic tiles, designed to withstand the harsh marine environment and align with the common architectural language across the Seafront masterplan.
#spacexacme #architecture #design #Folkestone #archilovers residential

Cambridge North, Cambridgeshire
Cambridge North has a 100-year history of track welding. Today, it is one of three new city quarters identified to support UK’s growth as a world leader in Life Sciences. Network Rail opened the railway station in 2017, planting the initial seed for redevelopment on the brownfield site. By 2050, approximately 20,000 inhabitants will live here.
The masterplan for the new town centre creates a network of streets and public spaces extending into the future context, using proportions familiar to Cambridge. A cluster of Life Science buildings are located against the edge of the railways, while residential buildings are arranged around a large park, alongside existing allotments.
The central square between these two character zones defines the heart of this new community, activated by retail and community uses. Design guidelines provide rules for setbacks in massing, materiality and articulation of facades to create a townscape that belongs to Cambridge.
The Cam River Valley is a critical zone for flooding and groundwater management, and great care has been taken to create an urban landscape that is open and permeable for rainwater. Innovative water management strategies, such as rain gardens, swales, and a large balancing pond within a proposed wild park, achieve a balance of water demand and supply 💧
Client: Chesterton Partnership
Collaborating Architect: @make_architects
Landscape Architecture: @robertmyersassociates
Planning: @bidwellsllp
#spacexacme #cambridge #masterplan #archilovers #architecture

Cambridge North, Cambridgeshire
Cambridge North has a 100-year history of track welding. Today, it is one of three new city quarters identified to support UK’s growth as a world leader in Life Sciences. Network Rail opened the railway station in 2017, planting the initial seed for redevelopment on the brownfield site. By 2050, approximately 20,000 inhabitants will live here.
The masterplan for the new town centre creates a network of streets and public spaces extending into the future context, using proportions familiar to Cambridge. A cluster of Life Science buildings are located against the edge of the railways, while residential buildings are arranged around a large park, alongside existing allotments.
The central square between these two character zones defines the heart of this new community, activated by retail and community uses. Design guidelines provide rules for setbacks in massing, materiality and articulation of facades to create a townscape that belongs to Cambridge.
The Cam River Valley is a critical zone for flooding and groundwater management, and great care has been taken to create an urban landscape that is open and permeable for rainwater. Innovative water management strategies, such as rain gardens, swales, and a large balancing pond within a proposed wild park, achieve a balance of water demand and supply 💧
Client: Chesterton Partnership
Collaborating Architect: @make_architects
Landscape Architecture: @robertmyersassociates
Planning: @bidwellsllp
#spacexacme #cambridge #masterplan #archilovers #architecture

Cambridge North, Cambridgeshire
Cambridge North has a 100-year history of track welding. Today, it is one of three new city quarters identified to support UK’s growth as a world leader in Life Sciences. Network Rail opened the railway station in 2017, planting the initial seed for redevelopment on the brownfield site. By 2050, approximately 20,000 inhabitants will live here.
The masterplan for the new town centre creates a network of streets and public spaces extending into the future context, using proportions familiar to Cambridge. A cluster of Life Science buildings are located against the edge of the railways, while residential buildings are arranged around a large park, alongside existing allotments.
The central square between these two character zones defines the heart of this new community, activated by retail and community uses. Design guidelines provide rules for setbacks in massing, materiality and articulation of facades to create a townscape that belongs to Cambridge.
The Cam River Valley is a critical zone for flooding and groundwater management, and great care has been taken to create an urban landscape that is open and permeable for rainwater. Innovative water management strategies, such as rain gardens, swales, and a large balancing pond within a proposed wild park, achieve a balance of water demand and supply 💧
Client: Chesterton Partnership
Collaborating Architect: @make_architects
Landscape Architecture: @robertmyersassociates
Planning: @bidwellsllp
#spacexacme #cambridge #masterplan #archilovers #architecture

Cambridge North, Cambridgeshire
Cambridge North has a 100-year history of track welding. Today, it is one of three new city quarters identified to support UK’s growth as a world leader in Life Sciences. Network Rail opened the railway station in 2017, planting the initial seed for redevelopment on the brownfield site. By 2050, approximately 20,000 inhabitants will live here.
The masterplan for the new town centre creates a network of streets and public spaces extending into the future context, using proportions familiar to Cambridge. A cluster of Life Science buildings are located against the edge of the railways, while residential buildings are arranged around a large park, alongside existing allotments.
The central square between these two character zones defines the heart of this new community, activated by retail and community uses. Design guidelines provide rules for setbacks in massing, materiality and articulation of facades to create a townscape that belongs to Cambridge.
The Cam River Valley is a critical zone for flooding and groundwater management, and great care has been taken to create an urban landscape that is open and permeable for rainwater. Innovative water management strategies, such as rain gardens, swales, and a large balancing pond within a proposed wild park, achieve a balance of water demand and supply 💧
Client: Chesterton Partnership
Collaborating Architect: @make_architects
Landscape Architecture: @robertmyersassociates
Planning: @bidwellsllp
#spacexacme #cambridge #masterplan #archilovers #architecture

Cambridge North, Cambridgeshire
Cambridge North has a 100-year history of track welding. Today, it is one of three new city quarters identified to support UK’s growth as a world leader in Life Sciences. Network Rail opened the railway station in 2017, planting the initial seed for redevelopment on the brownfield site. By 2050, approximately 20,000 inhabitants will live here.
The masterplan for the new town centre creates a network of streets and public spaces extending into the future context, using proportions familiar to Cambridge. A cluster of Life Science buildings are located against the edge of the railways, while residential buildings are arranged around a large park, alongside existing allotments.
The central square between these two character zones defines the heart of this new community, activated by retail and community uses. Design guidelines provide rules for setbacks in massing, materiality and articulation of facades to create a townscape that belongs to Cambridge.
The Cam River Valley is a critical zone for flooding and groundwater management, and great care has been taken to create an urban landscape that is open and permeable for rainwater. Innovative water management strategies, such as rain gardens, swales, and a large balancing pond within a proposed wild park, achieve a balance of water demand and supply 💧
Client: Chesterton Partnership
Collaborating Architect: @make_architects
Landscape Architecture: @robertmyersassociates
Planning: @bidwellsllp
#spacexacme #cambridge #masterplan #archilovers #architecture

Cambridge North, Cambridgeshire
Cambridge North has a 100-year history of track welding. Today, it is one of three new city quarters identified to support UK’s growth as a world leader in Life Sciences. Network Rail opened the railway station in 2017, planting the initial seed for redevelopment on the brownfield site. By 2050, approximately 20,000 inhabitants will live here.
The masterplan for the new town centre creates a network of streets and public spaces extending into the future context, using proportions familiar to Cambridge. A cluster of Life Science buildings are located against the edge of the railways, while residential buildings are arranged around a large park, alongside existing allotments.
The central square between these two character zones defines the heart of this new community, activated by retail and community uses. Design guidelines provide rules for setbacks in massing, materiality and articulation of facades to create a townscape that belongs to Cambridge.
The Cam River Valley is a critical zone for flooding and groundwater management, and great care has been taken to create an urban landscape that is open and permeable for rainwater. Innovative water management strategies, such as rain gardens, swales, and a large balancing pond within a proposed wild park, achieve a balance of water demand and supply 💧
Client: Chesterton Partnership
Collaborating Architect: @make_architects
Landscape Architecture: @robertmyersassociates
Planning: @bidwellsllp
#spacexacme #cambridge #masterplan #archilovers #architecture

60 Aldgate, London
Aldgate High Street was one of the busiest gateways into the medieval City of London, and the stretch in front of the Aldgate has been known as Butcher Alley for over 300 years.
The demolition of the Haydon Goodsyard Station and the construction of the Metropolitan Line and Aldgate Station have left behind a significant gap in the urban fabric. ACME’s design of 60 Aldgate, a new office building, closes this urban void between the City and Whitechapel.
The structure of 60 Aldgate is designed in response to the constraints imposed by the London Underground below, incorporating a large cantilever. The need for the building to float above the train tracks is celebrated through vaulted entrance spaces carved into the volume.
Red-coloured timber vaults provide space for the foyer, cafés and the realigned medieval passageway, Harrow Alley. Above, the sculptural roofscape with 13 terraces over three floors, creating 750sqm of biodiverse green roof gardens 🌱
Part of the existing site contains the Still & Star, a Public House first noted in 1730 as a gin palace and slum pub. The scheme re-provides a larger Still & Star in a more prominent location on Aldgate High Street, as a gin palace and distillery with a botanical herb farm, preserving an imprint of its history.
#spacexacme #architecture #design #London #history aldgate archilovers

60 Aldgate, London
Aldgate High Street was one of the busiest gateways into the medieval City of London, and the stretch in front of the Aldgate has been known as Butcher Alley for over 300 years.
The demolition of the Haydon Goodsyard Station and the construction of the Metropolitan Line and Aldgate Station have left behind a significant gap in the urban fabric. ACME’s design of 60 Aldgate, a new office building, closes this urban void between the City and Whitechapel.
The structure of 60 Aldgate is designed in response to the constraints imposed by the London Underground below, incorporating a large cantilever. The need for the building to float above the train tracks is celebrated through vaulted entrance spaces carved into the volume.
Red-coloured timber vaults provide space for the foyer, cafés and the realigned medieval passageway, Harrow Alley. Above, the sculptural roofscape with 13 terraces over three floors, creating 750sqm of biodiverse green roof gardens 🌱
Part of the existing site contains the Still & Star, a Public House first noted in 1730 as a gin palace and slum pub. The scheme re-provides a larger Still & Star in a more prominent location on Aldgate High Street, as a gin palace and distillery with a botanical herb farm, preserving an imprint of its history.
#spacexacme #architecture #design #London #history aldgate archilovers

60 Aldgate, London
Aldgate High Street was one of the busiest gateways into the medieval City of London, and the stretch in front of the Aldgate has been known as Butcher Alley for over 300 years.
The demolition of the Haydon Goodsyard Station and the construction of the Metropolitan Line and Aldgate Station have left behind a significant gap in the urban fabric. ACME’s design of 60 Aldgate, a new office building, closes this urban void between the City and Whitechapel.
The structure of 60 Aldgate is designed in response to the constraints imposed by the London Underground below, incorporating a large cantilever. The need for the building to float above the train tracks is celebrated through vaulted entrance spaces carved into the volume.
Red-coloured timber vaults provide space for the foyer, cafés and the realigned medieval passageway, Harrow Alley. Above, the sculptural roofscape with 13 terraces over three floors, creating 750sqm of biodiverse green roof gardens 🌱
Part of the existing site contains the Still & Star, a Public House first noted in 1730 as a gin palace and slum pub. The scheme re-provides a larger Still & Star in a more prominent location on Aldgate High Street, as a gin palace and distillery with a botanical herb farm, preserving an imprint of its history.
#spacexacme #architecture #design #London #history aldgate archilovers

60 Aldgate, London
Aldgate High Street was one of the busiest gateways into the medieval City of London, and the stretch in front of the Aldgate has been known as Butcher Alley for over 300 years.
The demolition of the Haydon Goodsyard Station and the construction of the Metropolitan Line and Aldgate Station have left behind a significant gap in the urban fabric. ACME’s design of 60 Aldgate, a new office building, closes this urban void between the City and Whitechapel.
The structure of 60 Aldgate is designed in response to the constraints imposed by the London Underground below, incorporating a large cantilever. The need for the building to float above the train tracks is celebrated through vaulted entrance spaces carved into the volume.
Red-coloured timber vaults provide space for the foyer, cafés and the realigned medieval passageway, Harrow Alley. Above, the sculptural roofscape with 13 terraces over three floors, creating 750sqm of biodiverse green roof gardens 🌱
Part of the existing site contains the Still & Star, a Public House first noted in 1730 as a gin palace and slum pub. The scheme re-provides a larger Still & Star in a more prominent location on Aldgate High Street, as a gin palace and distillery with a botanical herb farm, preserving an imprint of its history.
#spacexacme #architecture #design #London #history aldgate archilovers

60 Aldgate, London
Aldgate High Street was one of the busiest gateways into the medieval City of London, and the stretch in front of the Aldgate has been known as Butcher Alley for over 300 years.
The demolition of the Haydon Goodsyard Station and the construction of the Metropolitan Line and Aldgate Station have left behind a significant gap in the urban fabric. ACME’s design of 60 Aldgate, a new office building, closes this urban void between the City and Whitechapel.
The structure of 60 Aldgate is designed in response to the constraints imposed by the London Underground below, incorporating a large cantilever. The need for the building to float above the train tracks is celebrated through vaulted entrance spaces carved into the volume.
Red-coloured timber vaults provide space for the foyer, cafés and the realigned medieval passageway, Harrow Alley. Above, the sculptural roofscape with 13 terraces over three floors, creating 750sqm of biodiverse green roof gardens 🌱
Part of the existing site contains the Still & Star, a Public House first noted in 1730 as a gin palace and slum pub. The scheme re-provides a larger Still & Star in a more prominent location on Aldgate High Street, as a gin palace and distillery with a botanical herb farm, preserving an imprint of its history.
#spacexacme #architecture #design #London #history aldgate archilovers

60 Aldgate, London
Aldgate High Street was one of the busiest gateways into the medieval City of London, and the stretch in front of the Aldgate has been known as Butcher Alley for over 300 years.
The demolition of the Haydon Goodsyard Station and the construction of the Metropolitan Line and Aldgate Station have left behind a significant gap in the urban fabric. ACME’s design of 60 Aldgate, a new office building, closes this urban void between the City and Whitechapel.
The structure of 60 Aldgate is designed in response to the constraints imposed by the London Underground below, incorporating a large cantilever. The need for the building to float above the train tracks is celebrated through vaulted entrance spaces carved into the volume.
Red-coloured timber vaults provide space for the foyer, cafés and the realigned medieval passageway, Harrow Alley. Above, the sculptural roofscape with 13 terraces over three floors, creating 750sqm of biodiverse green roof gardens 🌱
Part of the existing site contains the Still & Star, a Public House first noted in 1730 as a gin palace and slum pub. The scheme re-provides a larger Still & Star in a more prominent location on Aldgate High Street, as a gin palace and distillery with a botanical herb farm, preserving an imprint of its history.
#spacexacme #architecture #design #London #history aldgate archilovers

60 Aldgate, London
Aldgate High Street was one of the busiest gateways into the medieval City of London, and the stretch in front of the Aldgate has been known as Butcher Alley for over 300 years.
The demolition of the Haydon Goodsyard Station and the construction of the Metropolitan Line and Aldgate Station have left behind a significant gap in the urban fabric. ACME’s design of 60 Aldgate, a new office building, closes this urban void between the City and Whitechapel.
The structure of 60 Aldgate is designed in response to the constraints imposed by the London Underground below, incorporating a large cantilever. The need for the building to float above the train tracks is celebrated through vaulted entrance spaces carved into the volume.
Red-coloured timber vaults provide space for the foyer, cafés and the realigned medieval passageway, Harrow Alley. Above, the sculptural roofscape with 13 terraces over three floors, creating 750sqm of biodiverse green roof gardens 🌱
Part of the existing site contains the Still & Star, a Public House first noted in 1730 as a gin palace and slum pub. The scheme re-provides a larger Still & Star in a more prominent location on Aldgate High Street, as a gin palace and distillery with a botanical herb farm, preserving an imprint of its history.
#spacexacme #architecture #design #London #history aldgate archilovers

Friedrich Ludewig and Vojtech Nemec will be attending @ukreiif 2026!
If you’re in Leeds and would like to meet, please contact lcf@acme.ac
We’re looking forward to seeing you there.
#ukreiif #spacexacme#leeds #builtenvironment

Friedrich Ludewig and Vojtech Nemec will be attending @ukreiif 2026!
If you’re in Leeds and would like to meet, please contact lcf@acme.ac
We’re looking forward to seeing you there.
#ukreiif #spacexacme#leeds #builtenvironment

SAB, Leipzig.
The historic centre of Leipzig is defined by traditional mercantile trading houses, covered passages and courtyards and 19th-century grand hotels. The site for the new Development Bank of the Free State of Saxony occupies an entire city block just outside the historic centre, surrounded by socialist hotel and apartment blocks, capitalist office buildings, a short walk from Leipzig’s Grand Station.
The site was once an important part of Leipzig’s pleasure and ornamental gardens - Löhrs Garten designed by Johann Dauthes, and commissioned by banker and merchant, Eberhard Heinrich Löhr. The new building is defined by a new pleasure garden, a forest of 21m high columns, playing with the iconography of a traditional bank. This Forum is a civic gesture - a public space structured by column groups to form clearings, a reflection lake and green zones. The Forum’s permeability and openness provide a seamless transition into the building where the foyer, consultation rooms, conference centre, auditorium and canteen form the public areas of the bank.
Office floors have been laid out with a minimum of containment to encourage communication and to keep the facade open, preserving views onto the forum.
📷 Michael Moser

SAB, Leipzig.
The historic centre of Leipzig is defined by traditional mercantile trading houses, covered passages and courtyards and 19th-century grand hotels. The site for the new Development Bank of the Free State of Saxony occupies an entire city block just outside the historic centre, surrounded by socialist hotel and apartment blocks, capitalist office buildings, a short walk from Leipzig’s Grand Station.
The site was once an important part of Leipzig’s pleasure and ornamental gardens - Löhrs Garten designed by Johann Dauthes, and commissioned by banker and merchant, Eberhard Heinrich Löhr. The new building is defined by a new pleasure garden, a forest of 21m high columns, playing with the iconography of a traditional bank. This Forum is a civic gesture - a public space structured by column groups to form clearings, a reflection lake and green zones. The Forum’s permeability and openness provide a seamless transition into the building where the foyer, consultation rooms, conference centre, auditorium and canteen form the public areas of the bank.
Office floors have been laid out with a minimum of containment to encourage communication and to keep the facade open, preserving views onto the forum.
📷 Michael Moser

SAB, Leipzig.
The historic centre of Leipzig is defined by traditional mercantile trading houses, covered passages and courtyards and 19th-century grand hotels. The site for the new Development Bank of the Free State of Saxony occupies an entire city block just outside the historic centre, surrounded by socialist hotel and apartment blocks, capitalist office buildings, a short walk from Leipzig’s Grand Station.
The site was once an important part of Leipzig’s pleasure and ornamental gardens - Löhrs Garten designed by Johann Dauthes, and commissioned by banker and merchant, Eberhard Heinrich Löhr. The new building is defined by a new pleasure garden, a forest of 21m high columns, playing with the iconography of a traditional bank. This Forum is a civic gesture - a public space structured by column groups to form clearings, a reflection lake and green zones. The Forum’s permeability and openness provide a seamless transition into the building where the foyer, consultation rooms, conference centre, auditorium and canteen form the public areas of the bank.
Office floors have been laid out with a minimum of containment to encourage communication and to keep the facade open, preserving views onto the forum.
📷 Michael Moser

SAB, Leipzig.
The historic centre of Leipzig is defined by traditional mercantile trading houses, covered passages and courtyards and 19th-century grand hotels. The site for the new Development Bank of the Free State of Saxony occupies an entire city block just outside the historic centre, surrounded by socialist hotel and apartment blocks, capitalist office buildings, a short walk from Leipzig’s Grand Station.
The site was once an important part of Leipzig’s pleasure and ornamental gardens - Löhrs Garten designed by Johann Dauthes, and commissioned by banker and merchant, Eberhard Heinrich Löhr. The new building is defined by a new pleasure garden, a forest of 21m high columns, playing with the iconography of a traditional bank. This Forum is a civic gesture - a public space structured by column groups to form clearings, a reflection lake and green zones. The Forum’s permeability and openness provide a seamless transition into the building where the foyer, consultation rooms, conference centre, auditorium and canteen form the public areas of the bank.
Office floors have been laid out with a minimum of containment to encourage communication and to keep the facade open, preserving views onto the forum.
📷 Michael Moser

SAB, Leipzig.
The historic centre of Leipzig is defined by traditional mercantile trading houses, covered passages and courtyards and 19th-century grand hotels. The site for the new Development Bank of the Free State of Saxony occupies an entire city block just outside the historic centre, surrounded by socialist hotel and apartment blocks, capitalist office buildings, a short walk from Leipzig’s Grand Station.
The site was once an important part of Leipzig’s pleasure and ornamental gardens - Löhrs Garten designed by Johann Dauthes, and commissioned by banker and merchant, Eberhard Heinrich Löhr. The new building is defined by a new pleasure garden, a forest of 21m high columns, playing with the iconography of a traditional bank. This Forum is a civic gesture - a public space structured by column groups to form clearings, a reflection lake and green zones. The Forum’s permeability and openness provide a seamless transition into the building where the foyer, consultation rooms, conference centre, auditorium and canteen form the public areas of the bank.
Office floors have been laid out with a minimum of containment to encourage communication and to keep the facade open, preserving views onto the forum.
📷 Michael Moser

SAB, Leipzig.
The historic centre of Leipzig is defined by traditional mercantile trading houses, covered passages and courtyards and 19th-century grand hotels. The site for the new Development Bank of the Free State of Saxony occupies an entire city block just outside the historic centre, surrounded by socialist hotel and apartment blocks, capitalist office buildings, a short walk from Leipzig’s Grand Station.
The site was once an important part of Leipzig’s pleasure and ornamental gardens - Löhrs Garten designed by Johann Dauthes, and commissioned by banker and merchant, Eberhard Heinrich Löhr. The new building is defined by a new pleasure garden, a forest of 21m high columns, playing with the iconography of a traditional bank. This Forum is a civic gesture - a public space structured by column groups to form clearings, a reflection lake and green zones. The Forum’s permeability and openness provide a seamless transition into the building where the foyer, consultation rooms, conference centre, auditorium and canteen form the public areas of the bank.
Office floors have been laid out with a minimum of containment to encourage communication and to keep the facade open, preserving views onto the forum.
📷 Michael Moser

SAB, Leipzig.
The historic centre of Leipzig is defined by traditional mercantile trading houses, covered passages and courtyards and 19th-century grand hotels. The site for the new Development Bank of the Free State of Saxony occupies an entire city block just outside the historic centre, surrounded by socialist hotel and apartment blocks, capitalist office buildings, a short walk from Leipzig’s Grand Station.
The site was once an important part of Leipzig’s pleasure and ornamental gardens - Löhrs Garten designed by Johann Dauthes, and commissioned by banker and merchant, Eberhard Heinrich Löhr. The new building is defined by a new pleasure garden, a forest of 21m high columns, playing with the iconography of a traditional bank. This Forum is a civic gesture - a public space structured by column groups to form clearings, a reflection lake and green zones. The Forum’s permeability and openness provide a seamless transition into the building where the foyer, consultation rooms, conference centre, auditorium and canteen form the public areas of the bank.
Office floors have been laid out with a minimum of containment to encourage communication and to keep the facade open, preserving views onto the forum.
📷 Michael Moser

SAB, Leipzig.
The historic centre of Leipzig is defined by traditional mercantile trading houses, covered passages and courtyards and 19th-century grand hotels. The site for the new Development Bank of the Free State of Saxony occupies an entire city block just outside the historic centre, surrounded by socialist hotel and apartment blocks, capitalist office buildings, a short walk from Leipzig’s Grand Station.
The site was once an important part of Leipzig’s pleasure and ornamental gardens - Löhrs Garten designed by Johann Dauthes, and commissioned by banker and merchant, Eberhard Heinrich Löhr. The new building is defined by a new pleasure garden, a forest of 21m high columns, playing with the iconography of a traditional bank. This Forum is a civic gesture - a public space structured by column groups to form clearings, a reflection lake and green zones. The Forum’s permeability and openness provide a seamless transition into the building where the foyer, consultation rooms, conference centre, auditorium and canteen form the public areas of the bank.
Office floors have been laid out with a minimum of containment to encourage communication and to keep the facade open, preserving views onto the forum.
📷 Michael Moser

Swansea Arena has reached over 1million visitors since opening its doors in 2022!
“The venue has quickly established itself as one of the most important cultural and economic assets in our city, attracting audiences from across Wales and beyond. As well as bringing major entertainment to Swansea, the arena is also playing a key role in supporting conferences, exhibitions, graduations and community events, helping to drive footfall and activity in the Copr Bay area.
This success shows how important the arena is to Swansea’s ongoing regeneration and its growing reputation as a vibrant destination for culture and events.”
Cllr Rob Stewart, Leader of Swansea Council
@swansea_council
@arenaabertawe
Read more about ACME designed Swansea Arena at the link in our bio 🔗
📷 @huftonandcrow
#spacexacme #coprbay #SwanseaArena, #ArenaAbertawe #SwanseaBuildingSocietyArena architecture wales regeneration

Swansea Arena has reached over 1million visitors since opening its doors in 2022!
“The venue has quickly established itself as one of the most important cultural and economic assets in our city, attracting audiences from across Wales and beyond. As well as bringing major entertainment to Swansea, the arena is also playing a key role in supporting conferences, exhibitions, graduations and community events, helping to drive footfall and activity in the Copr Bay area.
This success shows how important the arena is to Swansea’s ongoing regeneration and its growing reputation as a vibrant destination for culture and events.”
Cllr Rob Stewart, Leader of Swansea Council
@swansea_council
@arenaabertawe
Read more about ACME designed Swansea Arena at the link in our bio 🔗
📷 @huftonandcrow
#spacexacme #coprbay #SwanseaArena, #ArenaAbertawe #SwanseaBuildingSocietyArena architecture wales regeneration

Swansea Arena has reached over 1million visitors since opening its doors in 2022!
“The venue has quickly established itself as one of the most important cultural and economic assets in our city, attracting audiences from across Wales and beyond. As well as bringing major entertainment to Swansea, the arena is also playing a key role in supporting conferences, exhibitions, graduations and community events, helping to drive footfall and activity in the Copr Bay area.
This success shows how important the arena is to Swansea’s ongoing regeneration and its growing reputation as a vibrant destination for culture and events.”
Cllr Rob Stewart, Leader of Swansea Council
@swansea_council
@arenaabertawe
Read more about ACME designed Swansea Arena at the link in our bio 🔗
📷 @huftonandcrow
#spacexacme #coprbay #SwanseaArena, #ArenaAbertawe #SwanseaBuildingSocietyArena architecture wales regeneration

Swansea Arena has reached over 1million visitors since opening its doors in 2022!
“The venue has quickly established itself as one of the most important cultural and economic assets in our city, attracting audiences from across Wales and beyond. As well as bringing major entertainment to Swansea, the arena is also playing a key role in supporting conferences, exhibitions, graduations and community events, helping to drive footfall and activity in the Copr Bay area.
This success shows how important the arena is to Swansea’s ongoing regeneration and its growing reputation as a vibrant destination for culture and events.”
Cllr Rob Stewart, Leader of Swansea Council
@swansea_council
@arenaabertawe
Read more about ACME designed Swansea Arena at the link in our bio 🔗
📷 @huftonandcrow
#spacexacme #coprbay #SwanseaArena, #ArenaAbertawe #SwanseaBuildingSocietyArena architecture wales regeneration

Swansea Arena has reached over 1million visitors since opening its doors in 2022!
“The venue has quickly established itself as one of the most important cultural and economic assets in our city, attracting audiences from across Wales and beyond. As well as bringing major entertainment to Swansea, the arena is also playing a key role in supporting conferences, exhibitions, graduations and community events, helping to drive footfall and activity in the Copr Bay area.
This success shows how important the arena is to Swansea’s ongoing regeneration and its growing reputation as a vibrant destination for culture and events.”
Cllr Rob Stewart, Leader of Swansea Council
@swansea_council
@arenaabertawe
Read more about ACME designed Swansea Arena at the link in our bio 🔗
📷 @huftonandcrow
#spacexacme #coprbay #SwanseaArena, #ArenaAbertawe #SwanseaBuildingSocietyArena architecture wales regeneration

Swansea Arena has reached over 1million visitors since opening its doors in 2022!
“The venue has quickly established itself as one of the most important cultural and economic assets in our city, attracting audiences from across Wales and beyond. As well as bringing major entertainment to Swansea, the arena is also playing a key role in supporting conferences, exhibitions, graduations and community events, helping to drive footfall and activity in the Copr Bay area.
This success shows how important the arena is to Swansea’s ongoing regeneration and its growing reputation as a vibrant destination for culture and events.”
Cllr Rob Stewart, Leader of Swansea Council
@swansea_council
@arenaabertawe
Read more about ACME designed Swansea Arena at the link in our bio 🔗
📷 @huftonandcrow
#spacexacme #coprbay #SwanseaArena, #ArenaAbertawe #SwanseaBuildingSocietyArena architecture wales regeneration
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