[004] Sarum Point x Gaffe
The first installment of our collaboration with @sarumpoint was unveiled at their pre-festival gathering at @houseofgaffe . Designed as a reinterpretation of the main stage’s material palette and visual language, the lighting installation offers a subtle insight into our collaborative process and ongoing exploration of light as atmosphere - forming a focal backdrop for the music throughout the weekend.
All three components will later be installed on site, establishing a continuous visual language across both stages.
With special thanks to @parametrica_studio & @ooze_studio_
For our inauguration, Sarum Point is partnering with @feald.studio to curate our pre-party and festival main stage.
Co-founded by five friends rooted in architecture and the underground music scene. Feald Studio explore the sensory impact of space-making and creative intervention bringing a unique perspective on crafting immersive environments.
Alongside @parametrica_studio , they’ll begin teasing out the materials, structures, and lighting that will feature across the site. As things come together, we’ll be sharing early glimpses of what’s to come.
The Byre installation from our 2025 edition.
Designed by @feald.studio , the Byre sat in the centre of the Meadow.
Built from recycled materials with a modular approach, the structure plays with colour and light to create different levels of enclosure and a permeable pavilion within the landscape.
The use of dual mesh layers and a white ripstop roof frames the corridor view by day, while allowing the orange to bleed into the meadow during the later hours.
This year we’re excited to invite back @feald.studio collective to work with us and develop the next iteration, which they’ll be showcasing this summer.
[003] “The Bottle Bank”
Designed as a fully demountable system, the structure prioritizes circularity and adaptability. All components can be disassembled and reused, with the fritz-kola bottles returning back into the recycling stream after the installation is deconstructed.
In this way, the proposal unites atmosphere, brand identity, and sustainable construction into a cohesive and expressive architectural intervention. Although the entry was ultimately unsuccessful, the process offered a valuable opportunity to explore the design of an intimate and immersive space.
[003] “The Bottle Bank”
The gabion walls are multifunctional: they provide enclosure, support newly introduced seating oriented both inward toward the fire and outward toward the surrounding context,
and form the structural base for a lightweight timber roof.
This roof offers shelter and a covered place of rest while maintaining a sense of openness and permeability by being raised above the wall tops. Within this, a carefully positioned opening and chimney guide the light and smoke from the fire upward, in an effort to protect the surrounding tree canopies.
[003] “The Bottle Bank”
A recent entry for the @horstartsandmusic x Fritz Kola competition.
The Bottle Bank takes the existing fire pit within Asiat Park and builds around it, creating a new shelter with areas for seating, gathering and interaction.
The identity of fritz-kola is embedded directly into the installation through repurposed fritz-kola glass bottles, which form the gabion walls that define and enclose the space. These walls act as both a structural and narrative element, expressing the brand’s commitment to reuse and circularity.
The stacked bottles refract the movement of the fire, catching reflections and flickers of light to create an ever-changing interior condition. Viewed from the exterior, the glow of the fire through these bottles would present as a moving façade, and encourage interaction from passing festival-goers.
[002] “AWAKE”
The lattice timber framework was developed in collaboration with @louis.axcell . The kit-of-parts system enabled prefabrication and assembly ahead of the on-site installation of his design for @intotheburrowfestival .
[002] “AWAKE”
Developed in collaboration with @louis.axcell , founder of @intotheburrowfestival , ‘AWAKE’ translates his original stage concept into a buildable form. Centred around an oculus opening, the structure uses a lattice timber framework clad in thin horizontal slats to create a layered enclosure that filters light and sound.
Built off-site and assembled within the festival woodland, the stage now remains as a permanent sculptural element within the landscape. It will be reused for future editions of the festival, as part of the site’s evolving identity.
[001] “The Byre”
The Byre is founded on the application of easily sourced materials regularly used in construction. With standard scaffolding forming a base of diagonal supports, the structure plays with colour and light through the use of different scaffold wraps that create a permeable pavilion within the landscape.
The use of dual mesh layers and a white ripstop roof projects the glow, allowing the orange to bleed into the landscape during the later hours.
[001] “The Byre”
“Byre” - A structure to keep cattle warm and sheltered.
Designed for Loud Places Festival as a place to gather and rest. Built from recycled materials with a modular approach, it plays with light and transparency to create different levels of enclosure.
A central corridor frames views of the Sussex landscape and proves inviting for tired legs.
Big thanks to @loudplacesfestival for giving us a creative license at their amazing festival.
Designed by @feald.studio , a friends-turned-architecture collective, ‘Byre’ finds shelter in an open landscape.
Offering a moments rest, ‘Byre’ is aligned with the Rotunda across the valley, drawing a direct line between sight and sound.
Another fresh addition to the site we’re excited to share – make sure to grab a ticket, with only a month to go and fewer than 100 tickets remaining.