Five Museums Making the Most of Concrete, Steel, Glass, and Nature

Extraordinary designs that celebrate natural and manmade history

February 2019
Sponsored by Pilkington North America – NSG Group

Continuing Education

Use the following learning objectives to focus your study while reading this month’s Continuing Education article.

Learning Objectives - After reading this article, you will be able to:

  1. Describe the design of the orientation space at the center of the Lascaux IV museum space.
  2. Summarize the two images evoked by the designers of the Huang Gongwang Museum.
  3. Explain the overall design concept behind the National Veterans Memorial and Museum.
  4. List two strategies used to connect the redesign of the Michael C. Rockefeller galleries at New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art to the rest of the museum.

This course is part of the Zoos, Museums, and Arts Academy

Below are a set of links to building type studies from Architectural Record, which are in-depth analyses of particular kinds of buildings, with photos, drawings, specifications, detailed descriptions, and design solutions. Click on each link below, read the article then complete the quiz to earn your credit and certificate of completion.

The goals of these designs were well integrated with their sometimes-heavy topics. The Civil Rights Movement, war, or the importance of ancient history were as much a part of the design considerations as materials and cost. To do the topics justice, these projects made the most of concrete, steel, and glass as well as the surrounding natural environment.

Lascaux IV by Snøhetta
Lascaux, with its grotto and treasures, gained an international reputation for the quality, diversity, color, and sheer size of its animal paintings. To alleviate the stress created by 250,000 annual visitors, Snøhetta designed this museum housing a cave facsimile, plus interactive and contemporary art exhibits, theaters, a shop, restaurant, and offices.
Josephine Minutillo

Huang Gongwang Museum by Amateur Architecture Studio
The Fuyang Cultural Complex takes visitors on a journey through outdoor and indoor rooms, creating surprises along the way, as you view the complex from different depths, heights, and angles.
Clifford A. Pearson

Gateway Arch Grounds and Museum
Eero Saarinen’s simple but brilliant design created a breathtaking stainless-steel catenary arch that soars above the Mississippi River. After many decades, the newly expanded museum, with its circular steel and glass canopy, is the main architectural component and centerpiece of the project.
Josephine Minutillo

National Veterans Memorial and Museum by Allied Works
The National Veterans Memorial and Museum’s 53,000-square-foot demanding structure in Columbus, Ohio, was so challenging, it was hard to find a qualified contractor to create it. The series of exposed concrete arches are curved in plan and overlap to create three intersecting rings and a spiraling circulation path, both inside and out.
Joann Gonchar, FAIA

New Design Revealed for Major Wing at New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art
During the renovation of the Michael C. Rockefeller Wing at the southern end of the Met’s massive building along Manhattan’s Fifth Avenue, the nearly 40-year-old glass curtain wall will be entirely replaced with a new system.
Josephine Minutillo

Lascaux IV

Photo © Eric Sole

Conditions within the cave replica are as close as possible to the real thing.