V&AEASTSTOREHOUSE
LONDON,UK
Located at Here East in London's Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park, the V&A East Storehouse reinvents the idea of museum archives and storage. With a design led by Diller Scofidio + Renfro (and supported by Austin-Smith:Lord), the Storehouse brings treasures out of storage and into public view for the first time in generations.
The centre is a purpose-built home for 250,000 objects, 350,000 books and 1,000 archives from the V&A’s collection of fashion, textiles, furniture, theater and performance, metalwork, ceramics, glass, sculpture, architecture, paintings and product design. Visitors are invited on a behind-the-scenes journey that uncovers and demonstrates how and why objects are collected, how they are cared for, conserved and researched and how they help make sense of our past, present and future as part of exhibitions and public programmes.
A central public collection hall turns the storage inside out. A rich array of objects are on display for visitors to explore – from some of the smallest curiosities in the collection to the largest and most significant rooms and building fragments. Highlights include Frank Lloyd Wright’s 1930s office for Edgar J Kaufmann Jr. – a unique and complete 20th-century plywood interior – and a 15th-century marquetry ceiling from the now destroyed Altamira Palace near Toledo, Spain, which is resurrected within the centre as a real architectural element above a new public space for displays and events.
Further spaces within the Centre host pop-up displays, workshops, performances and screenings alongside live encounters with the museum’s work – from conservation and research to exhibition preparation. This new model builds on the continued success of The Clothworkers’ Centre for the Study and Conservation of Textiles and Fashion located at Blythe House in West London where the V&A’s collection is currently stored.
A dedicated viewing gallery showcases a changing display of rarely-seen large rolled objects from the V&A’s extraordinary collection of theater stage cloths, carpets, textiles, tapestries and paintings, including a 15-meter-wide theatrical backcloth designed by Natalia Goncharova for the 1926 Ballets Russes London production of Stravinsky’s Firebird.
The V&A East Storehouse opened in May 2025 as part of East Bank, a new powerhouse of culture, education, innovation and growth taking shape in the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park as part of the London 2012 Olympic legacy.
Client | The Victoria and Albert Museum | Size (GSF) | 160000 |
Location Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park, London, United Kingdom |
competition2018 | Substantial Completion2023 | Expected Completion2025 |
Partners | Elizabeth Diller,Ricardo Scofidio,Benjamin Gilmartin,and Charles Renfro |
Project Leader | David Allin |
Designers | Bryce Suite,Anthony Saby,Mark Gettys,Kevin Baker,Bo Liu,Mario Bastianelli,Laura Haak,Xing Yue Wen,and Charles Blanchard |
Competition Team | Merica May Jensen,Jack Solomon,Swarnabh Ghosh,Kumar Atre,Jedidiah Lau,Andreas Kostopoulos,Benjamin Vanmuysen,Eric Hsu,and Yushiro Okamoto |
Austin-Smith:Lord | Local Architect |
Arup UK | Engineering (Structures and Services) |
Orsa | Principal Design Advisers |
Gardiner & Theobald | Cost Consultant |
Artelia | Project Manager |
Studio Gardere | Exhibition Consultant (Competition Phase) |