Park Palace Ponies
Conversion of theatre into an urban riding school
This is Park Palace Ponies. This is not about architecture of form and aesthetic, this is about questioning convention and using creativity to connect people together, to build engagement and community ownership.
This was a pilot project, which ran initially for 12 months to encourage young people to try a sport not ordinarily accessible in the urban environment. It brings back into use a disused cinema building and leftover pieces of green space for pony grazing and connects to growing projects, which will be supplied with manure.
This is a grassroots-led project, which we helped to make happen, and shows how architects can be catalysts for change in extraordinary circumstances.
Ripple Effect of Park Palace Ponies
“The RIBAJ MacEwen Award celebrates ‘architecture for the common good’ with a clear social purpose which enhances the lives of people. The winning 2020 scheme, Park Palace Ponies offers children skills rarely seen in the inner city. The team at Harrison Stringfellow enabled this dream. With maximum impact on minimum budget, the scheme at Park Palace sees a disused picture house in the Dingle area of Liverpool transformed into a starter riding school and stables for ponies.”
Read more about why we were chosen here.
2020 RIBAJ MacEwen Award Winner
HSA were approached by the client, a philanthropist with an interest in equestrianism, to turn a pipe dream into reality. The project; to transform a former disused theatre, in one of the most deprived neighbourhoods in Liverpool, into a starter riding school.
Originally, the project was supposed to be a new build grant-funded facility, but collectively we felt the success of the project was dependent on the buy-in of the community, their support would be critical to issues of security. This is therefore became a pilot project, which initially was intended to run for 12 months to encourage young people to try a sport not ordinarily accessible in the urban environment.
We promoted the story of the project to different audiences – the British Equestrian Foundation (who went on to fund the pilot project) the neighbourhood, the council and various other stakeholders. The project brings back into use a disused cinema building and connects with growing projects which will be supplied with manure. We also negotiated the lease of 5 acres of grazing from the council to meet environment health requirements – bringing back into use vacant pieces of land and transforming the urban landscape. We held community events to enable local people to find out about the project and contribute suggestions and held a pop-up cinema event once the building was safe to use to let people in and become part of the project.
Since opening the pilot project, the first 6 months saw 250 young riders taking part in the starter course, 40% of whom are from the local postcode L8 with over 200 more having contact with the ponies through open days and events.
“Shows how architects can be catalysts for change in extraordinary circumstances”
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