Situated in a sweeping valley surrounded by prominent mountain ranges, the small regional town of Moe in Victoria’s Gippsland is viewed as the poor cousin of its neighbours. Unemployment is high and there has been no recent development with residents having to travel for key services. There was a real sense of expectation when the hoarding came down at the old car park site on the rail line as the new library and community building were unveiled.
A gently curved and stepped platform of landscape and concrete follows the line of the railway, shielding the noise and impact of the trains while opening up to the town centre to create a new sunlit public square and community focus. Suspended above this curved podium and dramatically cantilevering over the public space are two timber clad volumes oriented directly down the main street, and forming a focus for this civic vista.
These wooden portals that frame views to the mountains, placed carefully on a landscaped platform that form the public square have created a new civic heart and identity for the town of Moe. It is truly a place for everyone to feel welcome and included, a place that brings the community together and that marks the shared aspirations of the town.
Moe has a new sense of place and a new way to appreciate its natural beauty. Officially named the Frank Bartlett Library and Community Centre, the project has reinvigorated a town previously bifurcated by the rail line and lacking a central community gathering space. Dubbed simply ‘the community centre’ by locals, the building provides a strong and vibrant civic heart uniting all demographics and connecting dislocated precincts of the town.
The community is embracing opportunities for markets, festival and public events. Latrobe City Council has invited residents to use the facilities to start community groups based on their personal interests, and enjoy the dynamic space designed to be led and owned by locals. During construction, locally sourced materials and trades were used encouraging sustainable outcomes and boosting the local economy.
Within a modest budget, the architecture seeks an inviting and open monumentality; a significance and dignity; achieved through a sensitive urban transformation and carefully crafted materials and assembly.
“It's clear that the community space …[and] library, [are] both an extension of the town of Moe, and Moe an extension of them. The Community Centre really does belong to the people of Moe.” By Sally-Anne Watson Kane on “Because we’re worth it” on On Time Typing, 26/06/2016 - accessed on 30/10/2018 http://www.ontimetyping.com/blog/moes-new-community-centre-because-were-worth-it
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Two timber portals over a landscaped platform embodying community and civic pride
John Gollings
The civic plaza
John Gollings
Curved forms maximize public space
John Gollings
The curved north-facing public plaza embraces the community
John Gollings
The two timber portals
John Gollings
Community Library entry and reception desk
John Gollings
Community Library at ground floor
John Gollings
Staircase to second floor
John Gollings
The community library serves various age groups
John Gollings
Community space at second floor
John Gollings
Two timber clad volumes are oriented directly down the main street forming a focus for this civic vista
Moe, Victoria
Australia
Latrobe City Council
06/2016
1900 mq
fjmt
Richard Francis-Jones, Geoff Croker, Louise Goodman, Lance White, Anne-Marie Cooke, Stewart Price, Fleur Downey, Amanda Beh, Richard Tripolone. Landscape Architect: FJMT + Taylor Cullity Lethlean
Building Engineering
TTW, Murchie, Slattery, McKenzie Group, MGAC, Arup, Resonate, JP Fire
MSF, Geze, Dorma, SGI, Building Engineering, T+G Flooring, Fethers, Nordic, Mariljohn, K-Five, Intraspace, Shaw
John Gollings
Curriculum
fjmt is a multi-award-winning Australian architectural practice dedicated to design excellence and the enhancement of the public domain.
Place and community are inseparable. Developed between these terms, each of our projects is a transformation and interpretation of the site to make visible the aspirations of the client and wider community for which we build. We seek to create form and public space that accommodates and reflects human appearance, values and ideas, and importantly extends to the public realm.
fjmt has won numerous architectural and design awards including the WAF ‘World Building of the Year’, and the Lloyd Rees Award for Urban Design, the NZIA Architecture Medal, and the RIBA International Award.
Through studios in Sydney, Melbourne (Australia) and Oxford (UK), fjmt undertake public, institutional, commercial and residential commissions throughout Australasia and recently in Europe. These commissions are frequently the result of international design competitions.