The notion of BALTIC began in 1991, when Arts Council England North East announced its ambition to achieve major new capital facilities for the Contemporary Visual Arts in Central Tyneside. Just a year later, the disused Baltic Flour Mills on the south bank of the river Tyne in Gateshead were selected as the site for this new development. In 1994, architect Dominic Williams, of Ellis Williams Architects, was announced as the winner of the competition organised by the Royal Institute of British Architects and Gateshead Council for the conversion of the mills into a contemporary art gallery. The result is a major international centre for contemporary art, the biggest gallery of its kind with 3000 square metres of arts space, which presents a dynamic and diverse programme of contemporary visual art. Joining the "Art Spaces" series and published in association with BALTIC comes this absorbing little book tracing the architectural development of BALTIC, from Flour Mill to Art Factory, and its function as an internationally renowned contemporary art space.
Other titles in the series: "Arnolfini"; "The British Library"; "The National Gallery, London"; "The Great Court at the British Museum"; "Scottish Parliament"; "The Asian Art Museum of San Francisco"; "Brooklyn Museum"; "Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum"; "Denver Art Museum"; "Museum of Fine Arts, Boston"; "LACMA"; "Menil Collection"; "New York Public Library"; "The Thomas Jefferson Building, Library of Congress"; "Walker Art Center"; "Guggenheim Bilbao"; "Orsay"; and "Centre Pompidou".