Bringing a cohesive visual identity together for the entire area for the first time, Bristol Dockyards new branding from How&How uses a dynamic system of photo collage to look at the locations history anew. “Less about painting pretty pictures,” Cat says, the approach instead “merges timelines, textures, typography and Dockyard trinkets together in an immersive, tactile and unmistakable-across-the-river visual.” The copy for the rebrand pays homage to Bristol history alongside more recent instances of activism. ‘Bristol doesn’t stand on occasion. Just look around. Colston’s in the Avon, theres paint on the walls, and placards behind Burnel’s workshop,’ reads one manifesto, referencing the iconic toppling of slave trader Edwards Colston’s statue in 2020.
While the agency has deliberately expanded outside of the constraints of classic nautical colors and visual cues there are subtle, tasteful hints that make us feel at sea; like the collaged ripped paper shards and edges that feel like land outlines on a map, or the drift down on the button of the museum’s new website is like a tide coming into shore. The identity’s primary pink is taken from Bristol’s iconic Totterdown’s terraces and has been combined with a palette of bright yellows, greens and oranges for digital assets, print ephemera and way-finding to tie the identity in with surroundings sights in the city. As for the bold iron-clad typography, this industrial touch sits somewhere between “a classic serif and a semi-bold sans”, leaving a modern stamp on the quarter when reduced down its two letterform logo.
“The Dockyards have always been a place of radical thinking,” Cat ends, “Now the brand matches up. And How&How cannot wait for people to once again line the banks of the Avon, desperate to catch a glimpse of Bristol’s – and one of the UK’s – most enduring icons.”