The Aronson Fine
Arts Center at Laumeier
Sculpture Park
will provide a much needed year-round facility for displaying art the Park as
it continues to broaden horizons in the region. Dubbed the “the crowning jewel”
of the Park, the building will meet American Association of Museums (AAM)
accreditation standards.
The Aronson Fine
Arts Center brings forth excellence in architecture, offering an expansive, yet
intimate environment, connected literally and conceptually to landscape, art
and program needs. The program includes exhibition galleries, special events
spaces, a library, administrative offices, collections storage and a reception
area.
Critically, the
design seeks to integrate intimately with the rolling landscape of the
surrounding Meramec Bluffs, providing visitors with an arresting, yet
appropriate object as a focal point for their wanderings about the grounds.
The central
challenge of museum architecture is the question of how the museum architecture
can complement, but not dominate, the art that resides within.
In this project,
art surrounds, inhabits, and is embodied by the building. Set on the grounds of
the 105-acre sculpture park, the Aronson building is a simple box in volume,
comprised of cast concrete and concrete masonry set into a gentle rise in the
landscape.
Yet, through the
use of innovative cladding material and techniques, the building becomes more
than a box containing art, to become one 70 pieces of sculpture in the
landscape. Like its sculptural neighbors, the Aronson Fine Arts Center
interacts with the viewer in a uniquely individual manner on all fronts.
Light and
shadows play across the skin, perforated in custom nature-inspired patterns,
enhanced by the diversity of materials behind the skin, and the varying
distances to the enclosure.
Each façade
engages the user for its own purpose: the lower side of the hill is the main
entrance, while a secondary entrance is provided on the uphill slope, adjacent
to the existing main building. The south façade is covered with a perforated
metal canopy for an exterior Resource Terrace.
The north face
has a high clearance for loading and unloading exhibitions and large scale
works of art. The viewer is allowed a preview of the art inside from an
exterior overlook into the main gallery, accessed from the east façade,
providing a glimpse even when the museum is closed.
This strategic
feature draws intrigue from park visitors, persuading them to return during
gallery hours, and thus achieving the Park’s goal of diversifying its audience.
Throughout the gallery, high windows provide an abundance of natural light,
while still maintaining wall space for artwork.
Location: St. Louis, USA
Architect: Brooks + ScarpaArchitects
Project
Team: Angela Brooks, Omar Barcena, Mark Buckland, Brad Buter, Silke Clemens,
Stephanie Ericson, Jordon Gearhart, Chris Ghatak, Luis Gomez, Emily Hogden,
Ching Luk, Matt Majack, Royce Scortino, Sri Sumantri
Civil
Engineer: Farnsworth Group
MEP
Engineer: Farnsworth Group
Structural
Engineer: BPA Group
Area: 17,755 sf
Cost: 7 Million $
Year: 2012
Client: Laumeier Sculpture Park
(Marilu Knode)














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