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Sanjay Gangal
Sanjay Gangal
Sanjay Gangal is the President of IBSystems, the parent company of AECCafe.com, MCADCafe, EDACafe.Com, GISCafe.Com, and ShareCG.Com.

Natural History Museum of Utah in Salt Lake City by Ennead Architects

 
November 30th, 2013 by Sanjay Gangal

Article source: Ennead Architects

The design for the new Natural History Museum of Utah embodies the Museum’s mission to illuminate the natural world through scientific inquiry, educational outreach, mutual cultural experience and human engagement of the present, past and future of the region and the world. Positioned literally and figuratively at the threshold of nature and culture, the building is a trailhead to the region and a trailhead to science.

Natural History Museum of Utah exterior in the snow, Image Courtesy © Jeff Goldberg/Esto

  • Architects: Ennead Architects
  • Project: Natural History Museum of Utah
  • Location: Salt Lake City, USA
  • Photography: Jeff Goldberg/Esto
  • Design Partner: Todd Schliemann FAIA
  • Management Partner: Don Weinreich AIA, LEED AP
  • Project Designers: Thomas Wong AIA, Alex O’Briant AIA
  • Project Architects: John Majewski AIA, Megan Miller AIA, LEED AP
  • Interiors: Charmian Place, Katharine Huber AIA
  • Project Team: Joshua Frankel AIA, Aileen Iverson, Kyo-Young Jin, Apichat Leungchaikul, Thomas Newman, Jarrett Pelletier AIA
  • Architect of Record: GSBS Architects
  • Principal-in-Charge: David Brems FAIA, LEED AP
  • Project Manager: John Branson AIA, LEED AP
  • Project Architect: Valerie Nagasawa AIA
  • Interiors: Stephanie DeMott IIDA, Stacy Butcher LEED AP, Beccah Hardman

The terrace overlooks the Salt Lake Valley, the city and the mountains beyond, Image Courtesy © Jeff Goldberg/Esto

Utah’s singular landscape and the ways in which humans have engaged its varied character over time are the touchstone for an architecture that expresses the State’s cultural and natural contexts. Together with the interpretive exhibit program and landscape design, the architecture is intended to create an inspirational visitor experience and sponsor curiosity and inquiry. The building provides much-needed space to preserve, study and interpret the Museum’s extraordinary collection of artifacts, and its exhibits explore and articulate natural history and the delicate balance of life on earth. The building houses advanced research facilities, supporting both undergraduate and graduate education at the University of Utah.

The Canyon, a sixty-foot-high central public space, is the centerpiece of the Museum’s interior, Image Courtesy © Jeff Goldberg/Esto

In the foothills of the Wasatch Range, the 17-acre site occupies a prominent place at the edge of the City and the University of Utah campus. Located on the high “bench” that marks the shoreline of the prehistoric pluvial Lake Bonneville that covered much of the Great Basin, the site offers breathtaking views of the Great Salt Lake, the Oquirrhs mountain range, Kennecott copper mines, Mount Olympus and Salt Lake City.

A view of the sky lit canyon and the bridges that span it, Image Courtesy © Jeff Goldberg/Esto

An extensive expedition across Utah in the summer of 2005 initiated the design process. This journey, whose goal was to investigate Utah’s identity as the starting point for the development of a unique and context-based architectural design in the service of science and discovery, featured visits to cherished natural sites and discussions with the State’s people. The influence of Utah’s cultural landscape, the specific impact of the site and environmental imperatives and the influence of the Museum’s institutional mission became the basis for the creation of a definitive architectural identity.

View of the Canyon (the sixty-foot-high central public space which is the centerpiece of the Museum’s interior), Image Courtesy © Jeff Goldberg/Esto

The building is conceived as an abstract extension and transformation of the land: its formal and material qualities derive from the region’s natural landscape of rock, soil, minerals and vegetation. Further reinforcing the essential continuity of nature and human experience is the landscape design strategy, which, in blurring the distinction between natural vegetation and topography and intentional interventions, places humans at the nexus of environmental stewardship. The Museum rests on a series of terraces that step up the hill and lay along the contours of the site with minimal disruption to the adjacent natural landscape; its powerful jagged profile references the mountains beyond. Intended to play a seminal role in enhancing the public’s understanding of the earth’s resources and systems as well as be a model for responsible and environmentally sensitive development, the Museum is designed to achieve LEED Gold certification.

Overall of Natural History Museum of Utah, Image Courtesy © Jeff Goldberg/Esto

A voluminous central public space – the Canyon – divides the building programmatically into an empirical (north) wing and an interpretive (south) wing and provides access to both. Spaces in the north wing support formal scientific exploration and an objective understanding of our world; these include research laboratories, conservation labs, collection storage and administration.

Image Courtesy © Ennead Architects

The south wing houses exhibits, whose narratives interpret the Museum’s extraordinary collections and guide the public through an exploration of the delicate balance of life on earth and its natural history. In the Canyon, bridges and vertical circulation organize the visitor sequence; views south across the basin expand the museumgoer experience; shafts of sunlight penetrate the apex, suffusing the space with natural light; and a grand vertical scale uplifts and inspires.

Image Courtesy © Ennead Architects

The material quality of the building’s exterior roots it in the landscape by recalling Utah’s geological and mineralogical history and expressing the design as natural form. At its base, board-formed concrete makes the transition from the earth to the manmade. Copper panels constitute the skin of the building, extending from the building’s volume at angles that reference the geophysical processes that created the metal. Accent panels of copper-zinc alloy enhance the subtle variegation of the copper’s natural patina. The standing seam copper façade is articulated in horizontal bands of various heights to emulate geological stratification on the building skin.

Image Courtesy © Ennead Architects

Image Courtesy © Ennead Architects

Image Courtesy © Ennead Architects

Image Courtesy © Ennead Architects

Image Courtesy © Ennead Architects

Image Courtesy © Ennead Architects

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Category: Museum




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