The ACCA building was designed by
Wood Marsh and completed in 2002. It consists of four large gallery spaces, and together with the Malthouse and ACCA form a
courtyard at the centre of the complex which is used as an outside performance and exhibition space. The building also includes two
rehearsal studios and an administration facilities for dance company
Chunky Move as well as a large
set construction facility for the Malthouse. Openings in the distinctive rusty steel façade are kept to a minimum to support a broad array of installations, temporary and digitally projected work, which contrasts with the inter-pressed metal and glass surfaces in the interior. The design references the European model of the
Kunsthalle, acting as a flexible shell for the display of art.
Sculpture Following the completion of construction, the sculpture
Vault, an abstract,
minimalist sculpture made of large thick flat polygonal sheets of
prefabricated steel by
Ron Robertson-Swann, was relocated to the building's forecourt, where it remains today. It is popularly known as The Yellow Peril, due to its colour,
modernist shape, cost, and controversy in the newspapers at the time of its placement. ==Description and governance==