Factory International Explained

Factory International
Mapframe:no
Location:Factory International
Water Street
Manchester
M3 4JQ England
Coordinates:53.4778°N -2.2576°W
Broke Ground:January 2019
Opened:June 2023
Owner:Manchester Quays Ltd (MQL)
Operator:Manchester International Festival
via the project's board
Cost:£185.79 million
Architect:Office for Metropolitan Architecture, lead architect Ellen van Loon
Project Manager:Manchester City Council
Structural Engineer:BuroHappold Engineering also civil engineer services and BREEAM
Services Engineer:BDP (building services) Charcoalblue (theatre)
Level Acoustics (acoustic)
Capacity:Up to 7,0001,500 – 2,000 auditorium5,000 flexible 'warehouse' space
Tenants:Manchester International Festival
Publictransit:Deansgate station / Salford Central station / Deansgate-Castlefield Metrolink

Factory International runs Manchester International Festival and operates Aviva Studios, a cultural space in Manchester, England.[1]

History

Factory International builds on the legacy of Manchester International Festival (MIF),[2] which focusses on performing arts, visual arts and popular culture. The festival is staged across Greater Manchester – from theatres, galleries and concert halls to railway depots, churches and car parks.

Plans to build a new cultural building in Manchester were announced in December 2014[3] by then Chancellor, George Osborne, who pledged a £78 million[4] investment as part of the Northern Powerhouse programme.[5] The project was backed by Manchester City Council, which stated that the venue would "play an integral part in helping Manchester and the north of England provide a genuine cultural counterbalance to London".

In January 2017, MIF were named as the operators of the new cultural venue,[6] tasked with developing its ideas and programme.

The Government announced that, from 1 April 2018, they would provide Arts Council England with an additional £9 million per annum to offer revenue support to the project.[7]

In recognition of the new balance of its activity, in September 2022, the whole organisation re-branded as Factory International,[8] though it will continue to present MIF every two years.

In 2022, the organisation was awarded a National Portfolio Award from Arts Council England of approximately £9.9 million per year.[9]  Key support also comes from Manchester City Council and a range of sponsors and partners.

In 2023, it was announced that the building would be called Aviva Studios after insurance company Aviva secured the naming rights for £35 million, making it one of the UK's biggest cultural corporate sponsorship deals.[10]

Aviva Studios

Aviva Studios, programmed and operated by Factory International, was designed by the international practice Office for Metropolitan Architecture (OMA), founded by Rem Koolhaas and is OMA's first major, permanent cultural building in the United Kingdom.[11]

The internal spaces of Aviva Studios cover approximately, with adaptability designed to enable the commissioning of large scale and intimate work across different art forms, including dance, theatre, music, opera, visual arts, popular culture and digital work, plus major exhibitions and concerts.

Aviva Studios was constructed on the former site of Granada Studios, where Coronation Street and other TV programmes were filmed and is located within St John's,[12] being developed by Allied London, which purchased the site with Manchester City Council.[13] The building's development coincides with that of the adjacent Science and Industry Museum. The museum is building a new £6 million Special Exhibition Gallery alongside Factory International; the new gallery was set to be complete by 2020.[14] [15] [16] Aviva Studios is next to the River Irwell, close to other city centre cultural sites, including the People's History Museum, John Rylands Library, the Opera House, HOME and the Royal Exchange Theatre.

Design

The building covers, and comprises three main internal spaces: the ground floor, warehouse and auditorium, with further spaces inside and outside of the building. The warehouse has a capacity of up to 5,000 and the auditorium up to 1,600 seated. The warehouse and auditorium can present events simultaneously, and the warehouse also has the ability to be divided into two spaces by an acoustic wall. Both spaces can also be combined to create and present different types and scales of events.[17] Two public squares on the north and west sides of the building also make up the Factory International site[18] and the scheme includes the restoration and reuse of the northern brick arched portion of the Grade II-listed Colonnaded Railway Viaduct.[19]

Programming

Pre-Factory events

In the run up to Factory International, MIF commissioned and presented a series of artists and events. Pre-Factory commissions have included Akram Khan's Giselle;[20] Thomas Ostermeier's Returning to Reims;[21] Available Light by composer John Adams, choreographer Lucinda Childs and architect Frank Gehry;[22] Everything that happened and would happen[23] by German composer and artist Heiner Goebbels; Special Edition, a series of musical offerings presented with The Warehouse Project;[24] Invisible Cities,[25] a co-commission between MIF, 59 Productions and Rambert; Ivo Van Hove's The Fountainhead;[26] Rafael Lozano-Hemmer's Atmospheric Memory;[27] and to the Moon by Laurie Anderson.[28]

Virtual Factory

In July 2020, MIF launched Virtual Factory,[29] a series of online commissions by artists, inspired by Factory International's new building, its architecture and the history of the site. The first commission was Your Progress Will Be Saved,[30] by the artist avatar LaTurbo Avedon, in which Factory International was built in the global gaming platform Fortnite Creative. Other artists commissioned for Virtual Factory included Tai Shani and Robert Yang. The final commission for the Virtual Factory platform will be by artist and filmmaker Jenn Nkiru, set to launch in 2023.

Opening programme (2023)

In September 2022, Factory International announced its opening programme for the building. It included Free Your Mind, an immersive Matrix films-themed dance, music and visual effects experience with a creative team including composer Michael 'Mikey J' Asante MBE and choreographer Kenrick 'H2O' Sandy MBE (founders of hip-hop dance company Boy Blue), artist and stage designer Es Devlin, playwright and poet Sabrina Mahfouz and director Danny Boyle.[31] The programme announcement also included You Me and the Balloons by Yayoi Kusama,[32] and The Welcome, a series of events and performances curated by the people of Greater Manchester.

Summer Factory (2024)

Summer 2024 saw the launch of Summer Factory, a series of cultural and food events at the venue, including the audiovisual installation Sweet Dreams in the Aviva Warehouse.

International work

Factory International collaborates with venues, festivals and companies across the world to commission artists together, working with local, national and international partners and co-producers.

As MIF, Factory International was part of an Arts Council England initiative with The Public Theater in New York – to promote artists and companies based in England to a global audience.[33] Under the Radar Festival supported artists involved in theatre and performance.

Training and employment

Factory International delivers a skills, engagement and training programme under the banner the Factory Academy. Since launching in 2018, the Factory Academy has delivered several projects. In January 2019, seven local people who were not in education or employment completed a seven-month traineeship with MIF in roles such as IT, digital, production, ticketing and development. In January 2020, five young people were employed as Creative Venue Technician apprentices with Consortium members.[34]

Timescale

The timeframe of the project contains the following key milestones:

See also

Further reading

Notes

The original timeline was as follows:

The revised timeline was as follows:

Reference to Note 1
Reference to Note 2

Notes and References

  1. News: Wainwright . Oliver . 18 October 2023 . 24 hour party precinct: inside Manchester's Aviva Studios – where even the loos are a stage . en-GB . The Guardian . 19 October 2023 . 0261-3077.
  2. News: Morrison . Richard . 7 June 2023 . There's vim up north – why Manchester is a cultural powerhouse . . en . 7 June 2023 . 0140-0460.
  3. Citations:
  4. News: 3 December 2014 . Manchester to get new £78m theatre named The Factory . BBC News . 21 January 2015.
  5. News: 3 December 2014 . Manchester to get new £78m theatre . en-GB . BBC News . 15 September 2020.
  6. News: 13 January 2017 . Factory Manchester Gets the GO Ahead! . en-GB . Manchester's Finest . 15 September 2020.
  7. Executive meeting: 16. Updated Draft St Johns Strategic regeneration framework and Factory Manchester . Manchester City Council . July 2016 . . Manchester City Council . 22 July 2016. Pdf.
  8. News: Brown . Mark . correspondent . Mark Brown North of England . 29 September 2022 . Danny Boyle Matrix 'spectacular' to open Manchester's Factory . en-GB . The Guardian . 7 June 2023 . 0261-3077.
  9. Web site: The data: 2022/23 extension . 7 June 2023 . Arts Council England . en.
  10. News: Brown . Mark . correspondent . Mark Brown North of England . 20 June 2023 . Manchester arts venue Factory International renamed after Aviva . en-GB . The Guardian . 21 June 2023 . 0261-3077.
  11. News: Brown . Mark . 25 November 2015 . Rem Koolhaas wins Factory design project as Manchester goes Dutch . en-GB . The Guardian . 7 June 2023 . 0261-3077.
  12. Web site: Vision. 21 September 2020. St. John's, Manchester. en-GB.
  13. Web site: 27 September 2013. Granada's Quay Street complex bought by Allied London and Manchester City Council. 21 September 2020. Prolific North. en.
  14. Web site: Barlow. Nigel. 28 November 2019. Work starts on new Special Exhibitions Gallery at Manchester's Science and Industry Museum. 21 September 2020. About Manchester. en-GB.
  15. Web site: Building our new gallery. 18 January 2017. msimanchester.org.uk. Museum of Science and Industry. Pdf of Carmody Groarke's design.
  16. Web site: Museum of Science and Industry. 25 July 2016. carmodygroarke.com. Carmody Groarke.
  17. Executive meeting: 9. Factory Manchester . Manchester City Council . 26 July 2017 . . Manchester City Council . 29 July 2017 . Pdf.
  18. Web site: The Factory . 22 July 2016 . stjohnsmanchester.com . Manchester Quays Ltd (MQL) . 26 July 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160726043233/http://stjohnsmanchester.com/the-factory/ . dead .
  19. Historic England
  20. News: Anglesey. Natalie. 28 September 2016. Review: Akram Khan's Giselle, at Palace Theatre, Manchester. 18 January 2021. Manchester Evening News. en.
  21. News: Crompton. Sarah. Review: Returning to Reims (HOME, MIF) . 10 July 2017. 18 January 2021. What's on Stage. en-GB.
  22. News: Mackrell. Judith. 7 July 2017. Available Light review – Lucinda Childs' minimalist movers weave through John Adams' music. 18 January 2021. The Guardian. en.
  23. News: Morrison. Richard. Theatre review: Everything that happened and would happen at the Mayfield, Manchester. en. The Sunday Times. 12 October 2018. 18 January 2021.
  24. News: Oliver. Jake. 15 November 2018. Live Review: Bicep (WHP x MIF). 18 January 2021. The Mancunion. en-GB.
  25. News: Monahan. Mark. 5 July 2019. Invisible Cities, Manchester International Festival review: Brunel meets Dante in this spellbinding spectacle. en-GB. The Telegraph. 18 January 2021.
  26. News: Williams. Holly. 9 July 2019. Ivo van Hove: 'I want to make the most extreme production possible'. 18 January 2021. inews. en.
  27. News: Bonime. Western. Future Everything explores the impact of our voice on the world in Atmospheric Memory. 19 August 2019. 18 January 2021. Forbes. en.
  28. News: Eastham. Ben. Satellite of Love. 9 August 2019. 18 January 2021. ArtReview. en.
  29. Web site: Heward. Emily. 2 July 2020. Take a virtual tour of Manchester's massive new Factory arts centre. 18 January 2021. Manchester Evening News. en.
  30. Web site: Webster. Andrew. 1 July 2020. The latest modern art installation is inside Fortnite. 18 January 2021. The Verge. en.
  31. Web site: 29 September 2022 . Danny Boyle Matrix 'spectacular' to open Manchester's Factory . 1 October 2022 . The Guardian . en.
  32. Web site: Bakar . Faima . The world's biggest ever Yayoi Kusama show will open in the UK next year . 1 October 2022 . Time Out United Kingdom . 29 September 2022 . en-GB.
  33. Web site: Under the Radar Global Partners . 8 June 2023 . publictheater.org . en-us.
  34. News: MEN. 3 February 2020. Apprenticeship Week sees launch of new creative opportunities in Manchester. 29 January 2021. Manchester Evening News. en.
  35. Web site: 24 July 2015. Provision of design services lots 1–7 for the Factory Development, Manchester. 5 August 2015. UnitedKingdom-Tenders.co.uk.
  36. Executive meeting: 16. The Factory Manchester: Project Delivery. Manchester City Council. 29 July 2015. Manchester City Council. 222–224. Manchester City Council. 5 August 2015. point 5.0. Pdf.