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Designed by the
1998 Pritzker Prize-winning architect
Renzo Piano [http://www.rpbw.com/], the
Modern Wing provides in 2009 a
NEW home for the museum's collection of 20th- and
21st-century art. Now a decade in the making, this 264,
000 square-foot building makes the
Art Institute [http://www.artic.edu/aic/] the second largest art museum in the
United States. The building houses the museum's world-renowned collections of modern
European painting and sculpture, contemporary art, architecture and design, and photography. The extraordinary scope and quality of these collections are a revelation; each displayed more comprehensively than ever before.
The Modern Wing allows the Art Institute to take its rightful place as one of the world's great collections of modern and contemporary art. The NEW Modern Wing is being built between
Michigan Avenue and
Columbus Drive, at the northeast corner of the block the
Art Institute of Chicago currently occupies. The addition will complete the cultural, urban campus of the museum.
The new street-level entrance on
Monroe Street will connect
Millennium Park to the heart of the existing museum through the new
Griffin Court. On the first floor, this daylit court will be flanked by new educational facilities, public amenities, galleries, and a garden, all of which will better actively link the Art Institute with urban life. The second and third floors will be dedicated to art and the viewing of art. The third floor will be completely lit by natural light.
Below street level will be mechanical systems, art storage, and support facilities for the entire Art Institute.
Flying above the art pavilion will be a shelter that filters the sun to create the natural shaded light conditions ideal for the enjoyment of art. This shelter is a kind of flying carpet made of aluminum leaves that perform the same job as the tree canopies all around in the park. It is a "soft machine" that sensitively levitates above the new wing, vibrantly screening the light. All this is made easier in a city that is built on precise north-south and east-west axes, perfectly in tune with the cycle of the sun, like a solar machine. The Modern Wing shelter will give the museum what it needs in terms of light, much as the open lattice of the
Pritzker Pavilion gives shelter to the
Great Lawn in terms of sound.
Limestone, a material used in the construction of the entire museum from its original
Beaux Arts palace to recent additions, rises from the ground like a topographic relief, massive and solid, as though it has always been there.
Above this topos, the building stands light, transparent, and permeable in steel and glass, in the great tradition of
Chicago buildings: solid and robust yet at the same time light and crisp. The
Nichols Bridgeway goes from the heart of Millennium Park to the public terrace of the Modern Wing, crossing high above Monroe Street like a fine blade. The sharp metal reminds us of the bold structures characteristic of
Chicago.
The bridge does what all bridges do: it connects two different worlds and makes it possible to share experiences, providing beautiful views for people walking up towards the sunlight or down in front of the unique
Chicago skyline.
Music by YouTube
Library
Grass -
Silent Partner
Filmed with Handycam
SONY HDR-SR12e
http://www.sony.it/product/hdd-avchd-hard-disk-drive/hdr-sr12e
____________________________________________________
by
Franco Di
Capua architect
.
- published: 06 Dec 2012
- views: 8474