Architecture and design news:
museums & heritage
Winning design chosen for V&A at Dundee
by Pete Hayman | 03 Nov 2010
Japan-based architects Kengo Kuma and Associates have been chosen to design the planned Victoria and Albert (V&A) Museum in Dundee. The practice was one of six shortlisted for the scheme, which will see an iconic new building developed at Craig Harbour - part of a wider regeneration of the city's waterfront area. A panel comprising representatives from the project's partners - Dundee City Council (DCC); the University of Dundee; the
Blackpool's Winter Gardens architect appointed
by Pete Hayman | 02 Nov 2010
Blackpool Council has appointed Donald Insall Associates to start work on the first stage of restoration work at the Grade II-listed Winter Gardens. The London-based conservation architect has been selected to revamp the Floral Hall and to open up the venue to visitors as part of phase one of the scheme. Existing features will be refurbished and the entrance located on Church Street and Coronation Street will be restored. New
Hanoi Museum opens
by Luke Tuchscherer | 21 Oct 2010
Hanoi Museum, a museum dedicated to Hanoi's history, has opened in Vietnam. The 30,000sq m museum is located in a specially laid out park with water features, exhibits from the history of Hanoi, and a reconstructed traditional Vietnamese village. The museum is next to the National Convention Center, opened for the APC Summit in 2006, which, like the Vietnamese Ministry of the Interior and the national parliament in Hanoi, were
Sector responds to spending review
by Pete Hayman | 21 Oct 2010
Leisure sector organisations have issued a mixed response to the chancellor's Comprehensive Spending Review (CSR) published yesterday (20 October). George Osborne announced a 25 per cent cut in the Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) budget, which will run over the course of the review period to 2014-15. Culture secretary Jeremy Hunt insisted it was a 'good settlement' and will help enable the government to "protect our sporting and
LA Holocaust museum opens
by Luke Tuchscherer | 18 Oct 2010
The US$19m Los Angeles Museum of the Holocaust has opened in the US city. The 14,000sq ft museum, designed by architect Hagy Belzberg, features nine galleries that attempt to tell the story of the Holocaust "as objectively as possible". Interactive exhibits, such as the 18 displays in the combined Deportation & Extermination and Labour/Concentration/Death Camps room, depict the "breadth, depth and severity of the world the Nazis created". Wall displays
Work starts on new Mary Rose Museum
by Pete Hayman | 12 Oct 2010
Work has got underway on the £16.3m construction phase of the new £35m Mary Rose Museum at Portsmouth Historic Dockyard, Hampshire. The Mary Rose Trust (MRT) has selected Warings Contractors - part of the Bouygues group - to build the new museum, which has been designed by a team that includes Wilkinson Eyre Architects. Due for completion in autumn 2012, the scheme will see a boat-shaped building constructed over the
REO secures Battersea Power Station deal
by Pete Hayman | 11 Oct 2010
Real Estate Opportunities (REO), the group behind the planned £5.5bn redevelopment of Battersea Power Station, has secured agreement over the deferral of debt repayments. The developer has reached a deal with its loan note holder that will see "all principal and interest payments" put on hold until 31 May 2011. It follows an announcement on 7 September that REO had been given an extension on a combined £262.5m loan facility
Architects appointed for new Las Cruces museum
by Luke Tuchscherer | 05 Oct 2010
An architect has been appointed to design the new Museum of Nature and Science in Las Cruces, New Mexico, US. The current site of the museum, at Mesilla Valley Mall, is 3,900sq ft, is not big enough. ASA Architects, based in Las Cruces, have been given a US$400,000-plus (£250,000, 289m euro) contract to design a new, larger, building downtown. The project is expected to cost US$5.3m (£3.3m, 3.8m euro)and the
US$10m expansion for Maryhill Museum of Art
by Luke Tuchscherer | 05 Oct 2010
The Maryhill Museum of Art near Goldendale, Washington, US, is to receive a US$10m (£6.2m, 7.2m euro) expansion. The new 25,500sq ft (2,370sq m) Mary and Bruce Stevenson Wing will represent the museum’s largest expansion in its 70-year history. Key elements of the expansion include: A dedicated education centre, which will double Maryhill's education space to accommodate the museum's range of programming, and a centralised collections suite with storage areas,
£15m Sea City Museum plans approved
by Pete Hayman | 05 Oct 2010
Southampton City Council (SCC) has confirmed that construction work can now start on the new £15m Sea City Museum after final planning permission was approved. The council has appointed Kier Southern - part of the Kier Group - to build the Wilkinson Eyre Architects-designed museum, which is due to open in April 2012. Housed within the city's Grade II*-listed former Magistrates' Court adjoining the Civic Centre, the Sea City Museum
Rome museum nets RIBA Stirling Prize
by Pete Hayman | 04 Oct 2010
Zaha Hadid Architects have picked up the RIBA Stirling Prize 2010 for the design of MAXXI, the National Museum of XXI Century Arts in Rome, Italy. The contemporary art museum held off competition from five rival shortlisted entries, which included Oxford's Ashmolean Museum - designed by Rick Mather Architects. Opened in November 2009, the €150m (£130m, US$205m) MAXXI building covers 21,200sq m (228,195sq ft) of internal floor space and contains
V&A at Dundee designs unveiled
by Pete Hayman | 28 Sep 2010
Six potential designs for a new landmark building that will 'dominate' Dundee's waterfront and house the city's planned Victoria and Albert (V&A) museum have been unveiled. An exhibition is to open at the University of Abertay Dundee's library tomorrow (29 September) to allow members of the public to view the proposals drawn up by shortlisted design teams. Vienna, Austria-based Delugan Meissl Associated Architects; Kengo Kuma and Associates of Tokyo, Japan;
New design for Jerusalem's Museum of Tolerance
by Martin Nash | 23 Sep 2010
The Los Angeles-based Simon Wiesenthal Center has unveiled a new design for its planned Museum of Tolerance in Jerusalem, to be built at an estimated cost of US$100m (£64m). The structure will include a theatre seating up to 1,200 people, an education centre and a glass wall opening onto the nearby Independence Park. Speaking to The Jerusalem Post, the organisation's founder, Rabbi Marvin Hier, said: "We gave an opportunity to
Work starts on Welsh landmark scheme
by Pete Hayman | 23 Sep 2010
Cadw, the Welsh Assembly Government's historic environment service, has started preservation work at the site Owain Glyndwr is said to have declared himself Prince of Wales. The man-made motte at Glyndyfrdwy near Corwen, Denbighshire, was one of Glyndwr's main residences and Cadw has raised concerns that it is danger of collapse. Work to preserve the site will be funded through the Welsh Assembly Government's Strategic Capital Investment Fund. Dawnus Construction
Mississippi museum to open in November
by Luke Tuchscherer | 15 Sep 2010
The Ohr-O'Keefe Museum of Art in Biloxi, Mississippi, is to open on 6 November. Construction of the the Frank Gehry-designed museum began in 2003 at a cost of US$15m (£9.6m, 11.5m euro), but unfortunately Hurricane Katrina struck in August 2005, when the museum was 11 months from opening. The price of completing the museum has now risen to US$36m (£23m, 27m euro), with work beginning again in July 2008. The
Public to comment on Southend Museum plans
by Pete Hayman | 14 Sep 2010
Residents and visitors are being given the chance to discuss plans for a proposed new museum in Southend-on-Sea, Essex, as part of a council-organised consultation. Manchester-based AEW Architects has been selected to design the new attraction and will be on hand at a seafront location opposite the pier for three days a week until 30 September. The £35m development is set to be built at the resort's Cliff Gardens and
Architect chosen for postal museum project
by Pete Hayman | 18 Aug 2010
The British Postal Museum and Archives (BPMA) has appointed Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios (FCBS) to lead the development of its new £19m home in Swindon. Work will now get underway on the restoration and repair of a Grade II*-listed property at the former Great Western Railway Chain Testing Works that will house the new attraction. Among the items included in the BPMA's collection to be made available to the public
New visitor attraction for Louisiana State Capitol
by Tom Walker | 18 Aug 2010
A new visitor attraction has opened to the public at the historic Louisiana State Capitol in the US. Designed by BRC Imagination Arts, the US$6.6m (€5.1m, £4,4m) addition includes exhibition galleries, restored public spaces, and a 12-minute interactive theatre experience featuring a Pepper's ghost presentation. There is also a The Legacy of Huey Long exhibition, a series of galleries that offer guests an insight into the controversial political legacy of
Winner of Historic Houses award announced
by Martin Nash | 17 Aug 2010
Wilton House near Salisbury in Wiltshire has won the Historic Houses Association's (HHA) Restoration Award for 2010. The award, in conjunction with art auction house Sotheby's and now in its third year, is for Wilton's work on its private dining room. The project is the centrepiece of a range of restoration schemes at the house, which has also seen its library, north ante library, smoking rooms, cloisters, gothic hall, inner
9/11 Museum to open in 2012
by Tom Walker | 13 Aug 2010
The museum commemorating the victims of the September 11 attacks on the World Trade Centre in New York is set to open to the public in 2012. The US$45m (£29m, €35m) Memorial Museum, designed by Davis Brody Bond architects, will cover 120,000sq ft (11,100sq m) and will be located beneath the memorial plaza. Visitors to the museum will enter through a glass-cased visitors' orientation and education centre located on the
Apethorpe Hall opens to visitors after £4m revamp
by Tom Walker | 11 Aug 2010
Grade I-listed Apethorpe Hall in Northamptonshire has been opened to visitors following a major £4m redevelopment of the property. Funded by English Heritage, the work on the property included the restoration of the interior areas - including the plasterwork, oak panelling and ornate fireplaces - by traditional craftspeople. A large section of the timber-framed roof has been repaired and re-roofed using thousands of local stone slates. In total around 150,000
Funding boost for 24 historic Welsh buildings
by Pete Hayman | 06 Aug 2010
Monmouth's Savoy Theatre and the Animal Wall - part of the Cardiff Castle complex - are among 24 historic buildings to receive a share of nearly £1m from the Welsh Assembly Government. The Savoy Theatre - one of the oldest venues of its kind in Wales - is set to benefit from repair restoration work to its front elevation after securing more than £39,000 as part of the funding package.
Jerusalem museum reopens
by Martin Nash | 27 Jul 2010
The Israel Museum in Jerusalem has reopened following a 3-year, US$100m (£64.5m, €77m) redevelopment programme involving new galleries, orientation facilities and public spaces. Led by James Carpenter Design Associates of New York and Efrat-Kowalsky Architects of Tel Aviv, the project also included the renovation and reconfiguration of the museum's three collection wings and the reinstallation of its encyclopedic collections. The museum's architectural footprint has increased considerably since its opening in
Danish art museum wins architectural award
by Martin Nash | 27 Jul 2010
Steven Holl Architects has received international architecture awards for the Herning Museum of Contemporary Art in Herning, Denmark, and the Knut Hamsun Center in Hamarøy, Norway. The awards, administered annually by the Chicago Athenaeum: Museum of Architecture and Design and the European Center for Architecture, Art, Design and Urban Studies, recognise "new and cutting-edge design" and aim to promote "excellence in architecture and urbanism from a global point-of-view." The Herning
Berlin's Jewish Museum to be extended
by Martin Nash | 23 Jul 2010
The Jewish Museum in Berlin, Germany - Jüdisches Museum Berlin - is to get an extension designed by original architect Daniel Libeskind, after the sale of land for the project was approved by current owners Berliner Grossmarkt GmbH. The museum is to build an academy housing a library, archives, educational spaces and offices on the site of the former flower market adjacent to its Kreuzberg premises in central Berlin. Construction
Designer appointed for SFMOMA expansion
by Martin Nash | 22 Jul 2010
Oslo, Norway-based architects Snøhetta have been appointed to design a new US$250m (£164m) expansion to the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA). The project, first announced in April last year, will incorporate additional gallery space and interior improvements in the museum's Third Street building, together with an extension on Howard Street - to the south - that will connect to the back of the existing museum along the southern
Funding boost for UK postal museum plans
by Pete Hayman | 02 Jul 2010
The British Postal Museum and Archive (BPMA) has been handed a boost from the Heritage Lottery Fund (HLF) towards a scheme to establish a new £19m home in Swindon. BPMA has moved closer to securing a grant worth more than £2.6m to help in its bid to provide public access to the former National Postage Museum's collection, which has been in storage since 1998. The HLF has awarded development funding
George W. Bush centre details revealed
by Tom Walker | 25 Jun 2010
Detailed plans have been revealed for the George W. Presidential Center, to be built in Dallas, Texas, US. Designed by Robert A.M. Stern Architects, The attraction will include a real-size replica of the famous Oval Office, a museum and a presidential library. The centre will also be the home of a public policy research institute. The museum will tell the story of the Bush presidency and thematic design will feature
Bosnian bomb shelter to become art gallery
by Martin Nash | 22 Jun 2010
A former nuclear bomb shelter near the town of Konjic, Bosnia, is to be host to the Biennale of Contemporary Art, D-O ARK Underground. The underground bunker, built between 1953-1979 for the then leader of Yugoslavia, Josip Tito, was intended to house around 350 people who could live there for up to six months without returning to the surface. With its entrance hidden by several houses, the well preserved shelter
Prime Minister's Award shortlist revealed
by Pete Hayman | 18 Jun 2010
Hafod Eryri, a new visitor centre on the summit of Snowdon, North Wales, is among more than 22 projects shortlisted for this year's Prime Minister's Better Public Building Award. In addition to the Ray Hole Architects-designed attraction, the refurbished Ashmolean Museum in Oxford and Hull Truck Theatre's new Humberside home have been shortlisted for the prize. Nottingham Contemporary - a new 3,400sq m (36,600sq ft) arts complex, London's Victoria and
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