SFMOMA Expansion / Snøhetta

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San Francisco, United States
  • Partner In Charge: Craig Dykers
  • Project Architects: Jon McNeal, Lara Kaufman, Aaron Dorf
  • Senior Architects: Simon Ewings, Alan Gordon, Marianne Lau, 
Elaine Molinar, Kjetil Trædal Thorsen
  • Design Team: Nick Anderson, Behrang Behin, Sam Brissette, Chad Carpenter, Michael Cotton, Aroussiak Gabrielian, Kyle Johnson, Nick Koster, Mario Mohan, Neda Mostafavi, Anne-Rachel Schiffmann, Carrie Tsang, Giancarlo Valle
  • Associate Architect: EHDD
  • Ehdd Team: Duncan Ballash, Lotte Kaefer, Rebecca Sharkey, Duncan Ballash, Lotte Kaefer
  • Webcor Builders, General Contractor: Jes Pedersen, Matt Rossie, Pat Reidy, Matt Paves, Jim Roux, Adam Bird, Joe Hovan
  • Plant Construction Company, Special Projects: Conrado Vellve, Mizell, Project Manager, Superintendent, Bob Klovich, Cliff Durant, Ken Ahrens
  • Av Design: BBI Engineering
  • Conservation Studio, Lab And Art Storage Design: Samuel Anderson Architects Electrical: The Engineering Enterprise
  • Façade Maintenance Engineer: CS Caulkins
  • Fire Life Safety Code And Sprinkler Engineering: The Fire Consultants
  • Furniture Selection And Design: Studios Architecture Graphics + Signage: SOM Graphics
  • In Situ Restaurant Design: Aidlin Darling Design
  • Lighting, Acoustics, Av And Façade Engineers: Arup
  • Living Wall Consultant: Habitat Horticulture, Hyphae Design Lab
  • Museum Store Design: Shopworks Design, EHDD
  • Network Design: TEECOM
  • Phyllis Wattis Theater Consultant: Auerbach Pollock Friedlander
  • Phyllis Wattis Theater And Gina And Stuart Peterson White Box Design Architect: EHDD, Turk Technologies
  • Sightglass At Sfmoma Coffee Bar Design: Boor Bridges Architecture
  • Façade Design Assistance: Kreysler & Associates, Enclos
  • Project Construction Cost: $305 million
  • City: San Francisco
  • Country: United States
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SFMOMA Expansion / Snøhetta - Image 23 of 33
© Jon McNeal

Text description provided by the architects. SFMOMA’s leadership worked closely with Snøhetta to design the new museum as an outward- looking and engaging gathering space. Connections to the surrounding neighborhood and city were carefully considered, along with bringing the benefits of landscape and the outdoors to the museum spaces. New pedestrian pathways around the museum and a new public entrance on Howard Streetbetter integrate SFMOMA into the South of Market (SoMa) neighborhood and activate the surrounding streetscape.

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© Henrik Kam
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Plan Level 1

The iconic eastern façade of the Snøhetta-designed expansion, inspired in part by the waters and fog of the San Francisco Bay, is comprised of more than 700 uniquely shaped and locally fabricated FRP (fiberglass reinforced polymer) panels. Throughout the day, the movement of light and shadow naturally animates the rippled surface. Silicate crystals from Monterey County embedded in the surface catch and reflect the changing light. Craig Dykers, founding partner of Snøhetta and leader of the firm’s design team for SFMOMA, said, “Our design seeks to create an intimate experience, welcoming a diversity of visitors to the magnificent collection, and fostering a connection between the visitor and museum for years to come. All of the senses will be engaged as part of the experience. Wonderful day lit staircases lead visitors from floor to floor, the galleries create a comfortable viewing experience of the art, and terraces allow for moments of repose, to be reinvigorated by fresh air, sunlight and vistas of the city between galleries. The visitor should sense that the building is inspired by one of the great cities of the world, San Francisco”.

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© Henrik Kam
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© Iwan Baan

Visitors are welcomed to the new museum by two main entrances, leading to ground floor exhibition spaces that are free to all. The entrance on Third Street welcomes visitors to the reimagined Evelyn and Walter Haas, Jr. Atrium, where the iconic oculus floods the space with natural light. Alexander Calder’s 27-foot-wide mobile, Untitled (1963), is suspended beneath the oculus, drawing the eye upwards, and a new sculptural stair leads visitors to Helen and Charles Schwab Hall, the main gathering space on the second floor.

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© Henrik Kam

On Howard Street, a new museum entrance adjacent to the glass-walled Roberts Family Gallery, allows visitors to enter the museum through Schwab Hall. Now presenting Richard Serra’s monumental sculpture Sequence (2006), the Roberts Family Gallery is a vibrant space visible to passersby, creating a visual connection between the city and the museum and showcasing SFMOMA’s community-focused mission. Inside, a set of maple-faced Roman steps provides an informal public gathering spot and seating area. From both entrances, stairs lead visitors to Schwab Hall, the hub of the new museum. Visitors can enjoy a rotating installation of artworks, such as Sol LeWitt’s joyful Wall Drawing 895: Loopy Doopy (white and blue) (1999), or obtain admission to explore the rest of the museum. From here, a maple- clad stair leads upward to the third-floor Pritzker Center for Photography and the galleries above.

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Section

The new galleries in the Snøhetta-designed expansion are intimate in scale and create ideal conditions for viewing the artworks. Diverse gallery spaces support the display of specific collections and works of various scales. Minimal, flexible, column-free galleries permit countless temporary wall layouts—a blank canvas for the curators. At opening, visitors can experience a contemplative, octagonal-shaped gallery devoted to seven works by Agnes Martin and loft-like galleries on the seventh floor that offer space for contemporary artworks.

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© Iwan Baan
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© Iwan Baan

Terraces adjacent to many galleries extend exhibitions into the city, displaying outdoor sculptures and offering unparalleled views of San Francisco. The new third-floor Pat and Bill Wilson Sculpture Terrace is home to the largest public living wall in the United States with more than 19,000 plants and 21 native species. This curated sequence of spaces allows visitors to move between incredible artworks to broad overlooks, and enjoy views of the city as they circulate through and up the museum.

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© Henrik Kam
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Plan Level 7

Complementing the museum’s incredible art galleries, the new SFMOMA features dynamic educational program and performances. The new Koret Education Center serves students, teachers and lifelong learners with a resource library and studio classrooms. SFMOMA partnered with Bay Area innovator Meyer Sound to install sound solutions throughout the museum, including a state-of-the-art Constellation acoustic system in the newly renovated Phyllis Wattis Theater. The Wattis Theater screens archival film and offers cutting-edge 4K projection. The new Gina and Stuart Peterson White Box is a uniquely flexible space, with a theatrical truss that supports a variety of performances, events or large scale artworks.

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© Iwan Baan

The new SFMOMA is on track to receive LEED Gold certification, and is one of the first museums in the country to employ all LED lighting throughout the gallery spaces. This measure helped the museum meet its ambitious sustainability goals.

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© Henrik Kam

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Project location

Address:151 3rd St, San Francisco, CA 94103, USA

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Location to be used only as a reference. It could indicate city/country but not exact address.
About this office
Cite: "SFMOMA Expansion / Snøhetta" 04 May 2016. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/786762/sfmoma-expansion-snohetta> ISSN 0719-8884

© Henrik Kam

旧金山现代艺术博物馆(SFMOMA) 扩建项目/ Snøhetta

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