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Decommissioned oil rig to be transformed into ‘green’ art installation

The disused structure will be covered in plants and trees and feature a 10-metre waterfall

Tess de La Mare
Wednesday 13 July 2022 11:00 EDT
See Monster, a decommissioned North Sea offshore platform, will become one of the UK’s largest public art installations (Ben Birchall/PA)
See Monster, a decommissioned North Sea offshore platform, will become one of the UK’s largest public art installations (Ben Birchall/PA) (PA Wire)

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A 450-tonne decommissioned oil rig has been delivered to the beach front at Weston-super-Mare where it is due to be transformed into an interactive art installation.

Dubbed “See Monster”, the people behind the project are hoping it will transform perceptions around how out-of-date industrial infrastructure is disposed of.

It was delivered to the beach of the North Somerset town in the early hours of Wednesday, and is due to be lifted on to a base at the Tropicana arts and music venue in the coming days.

Once completed, the 35-metre high platform will feature a waterfall, a seated amphitheatre, a 6,000-piece art installation to give it “scales”, and will be covered in grasses, plants and trees.

The project was the brainchild of Leeds-based design and events company Newsubstance.

The oil rig on Weston-Super-Mare beach on Wednesday morning (Ben Birchall/PA)
The oil rig on Weston-Super-Mare beach on Wednesday morning (Ben Birchall/PA)

Patrick O’Mahony, creative director and founder of Newsubstance, told the PA news agency the idea was to find a platform “to tell stories with”.

He added: “What better platform than a decommissioned oil rig?

“The whole point was to create a structure that was big, joyful, and create a real impact – and that’s what See Monster gave us the opportunity to do.

“It will have experiments in renewable futures – so new thinking in wind turbines and solar, a giant waterfall that comes down the front, and a huge amount of kinetic sculptures across the entire structure.”

The rig spent 30 years in the North Sea and the last 12 months in a Dutch shipyard being stripped, cleaned and repaired ahead of its delivery to Weston-super-Mare.

Mr O’Mahony said: “We didn’t want to build from new, we wanted to really explore reused (materials).

“There are these big industrial structures all around the world, the rigs are just one of them, and we wanted to really create that blueprint to see what’s possible – we are taking these beasts that have had one life form and transforming them into something new.

The completed structure will be covered in plants and feature a 10-meter high waterfall (Newsubstance/PA)
The completed structure will be covered in plants and feature a 10-meter high waterfall (Newsubstance/PA)

“We wanted to bring it in almost as the beast and transform it into a beauty, and when it comes in and gets raised and put on the legs, over the next six to eight weeks we are going to plant a huge wild garden over the whole top.

“The point is that it is like it has been ‘rehabilitated’ – it has spent its life taking out of the earth and now it is time to give back.”

Despite the huge amount of effort that has gone into delivering the project, it will only be fully open for two months between the beginning of August and the end of October.

After it closes, many of the artworks are due to be installed around the town, while the rig itself will be deconstructed and recycled.

Mark Canniford, North Somerset councillor for placemaking and economy, said Weston-super-Mare had been chosen for the installation out of a “long-list” of seaside towns that wanted it.

The rig will sit on a huge base in the Tropicana arts and music venue (Ben Birchall/PA)
The rig will sit on a huge base in the Tropicana arts and music venue (Ben Birchall/PA) (PA Wire)

He said it is part of the town’s efforts to re-establish itself as one of Britain’s great seaside destinations.

“You can see the interest it has generated today – hundreds of people turned up to see this monster pulled up onto the beach,” he said.

“This will bring people in, there’s no doubt about it.

“Anyone in the West Country will come and have a look and see what this oil rig’s about, and also it is giving something back.

“It is something that has been used to extract carbon from our seas which is now going to show everyone what can be done with all the green energy it will be showcasing, which I think is so clever.”

Mr Canniford said the See Monster project is a marked contrast to the last art installation hosted in Weston-super-Mare – street artist Banksy’s dystopian theme park Dismaland in 2015.

He said while Dismaland had in part been about Britain’s neglected and declining seaside resorts, See Monster is all about regeneration and rebirth.

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