Foster unveils extension plans for Florida’s Norton Museum of Art

News: architect Norman Foster has presented plans to add a row of stone pavilions to the Norton Museum of Art in Florida as part of a major overhaul that will double the building’s gallery space.

Unveiled yesterday during the opening of the Art Basel and Design Miami fairs, the Foster + Partners masterplan seeks to restore the Norton Museum of Art in West Palm Beach to its original axial arrangement by relocating the entrance to the west side of the building.

Norton Museum of Art by Foster + Partners

Three double-height pavilions will be constructed along this facade to accommodate a new auditorium, events room and grand hall, and will be sheltered beneath an overhanging metal roof that tapers gently upwards to reduce its visual impact.

Based on the concept of a “museum in a garden”, the renovated building will be fronted by a pool of water, while a new museum shop and restaurant will open out to a sculpture lawn on the south side of the building.

“Our approach is a celebration of the local landscape and architecture,” said Foster. “The gardens will be planted with native trees and flowers and the masterplan strengthens the elegant formation of the original museum, redefining its relationship with the city with a welcoming new street frontage.”

Norton Museum of Art by Foster + Partners
Street elevation – click for larger image

New buildings will be built from white stone to match the art deco-inspired architecture of the original building, which was designed by architect Marion Sims Wyeth and first opened in the 1940s.

“The project combines old and new and continues our explorations into the museum in a garden setting, which began with the Sainsbury Centre and has more recently embraced the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston,” added Foster.

Public facilities will be able to function independently, creating opportunities for evening events outside of gallery opening times.

The architects have also developed a long-term masterplan for the site, which includes the possibility of adding two new gallery wings in the future.

Norton Museum of Art by Foster + Partners
Floor plan – click for larger image

Here’s a more detailed description from Foster + Partners:


Lord Foster presents plans for the transformation of the Norton Museum of Art

Three bold new pavilions, unified beneath a shimmering roof, herald the transformation of the Norton Museum of Art in West Palm Beach – host to the most important art collection in Florida. The masterplan, unveiled by Norman Foster in Miami today, allows the museum to almost double its gallery space and lays the foundations for future growth to become Florida’s leading cultural institution.

The first stage of Foster + Partners’ masterplan will establish its key principles: the sympathetic setting of a ‘museum in a garden’, with the original axial arrangement re-established to unify the visitor experience, and the creation of new public facilities. The museum will become a focus for the community with event spaces separate from the Art Museum, strengthening its role as a cultural destination for Florida.

The Norton Museum was founded in 1941 by Ralph Hubbard Norton and his wife Elizabeth Calhoun Norton and was laid out by the architect Marion Sims Wyeth as an elegant series of Art Deco inspired single-storey pavilions around a central courtyard. Subsequent expansion has broken the symmetry of the original east-west axial arrangement, and the creation of an additional car park to the south of the museum has led to the relocation of the main entrance to the side of the building. The new masterplan restores the clarity of Wyeth’s plan by reinstating the main entrance on a new street frontage on South Dixie Highway to the west – visitors will once again be able to see through the entire building via a new, transparent grand hall and refurbished glass and iron courtyard doors.

The new entrance is signalled by three new double-height pavilions, unified with the re-worked existing wing by a shared palette of white stone. The pavilions house a state-of-the-art auditorium, event space and a ‘grand hall’ – the social hub of the museum. The design also includes a new museum shop and a new restaurant with al-fresco garden seating which, like the new pavilion spaces, can operate independently of the museum to activate the campus throughout the day and at night.

A metal roof canopy floats above the pavilions and projects to shade the entrance plaza. The structure is gently tapered to visually reduce its profile, while providing stability to withstand hurricane winds. The canopy’s gentle lustre is designed to cast diffuse patterns of light in an abstracted reflection of people and flowing water below. Linear pools create a tranquil setting for the entrance plaza, masking the sound of traffic, which is visually set apart by a hedge. A curved opening in the roof accommodates the branches of a mature ficus tree and a further light well above the lobby illuminates and defines the new entrance.

The overall proposals reinforce the concept of the museum within a garden. Taking advantage of the Florida climate, the landscaping of the gardens and central courtyard incorporates native trees and flowers to provide shaded walkways, and the former parking lot is transformed into a new sculpture lawn. The borders of the museum’s expanded grounds are defined and integrate a row of houses at the perimeter of the site as an artist’s residence and studio, guest house and research facilities. The new sculpture lawn will provide an open-air venue for ‘Art After Dark’, the Norton’s popular programme of film screenings and events, and is bordered by a glass circulation gallery, connecting the interior with the lush green setting.

The masterplan enables the development of the Norton to be implemented over time, beginning with the reconfiguration and extension of the existing museum to create the landmark Dixie Drive pavilions and the new public amenities within a lush garden setting. This will include two new galleries with state-of-the-art environmental systems, a sculpture gallery and a new education centre. S

Subsequently, it will be possible to build two new wings for galleries to the east as part of the long-term masterplan.

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A pile of sand marks the entrance to Design Miami

A giant mound of sand appears to support an aluminium roof at New York studio Formlessfinder’s Tent Pile installation outside this year’s Design Miami fair, which opens to the public today (+ slideshow).

Roof over a pile of sand forms entrance to Design Miami 2013

Formlessfinder was commissioned by Design Miami to create the temporary pavilion for the entrance to this year’s fair.

Although the gabled roof appears to be supported by the pyramid of sand at first glance, it is held up by timber columns and a plywood wall across its centre.

Roof over a pile of sand forms entrance to Design Miami 2013
Photograph of the completed pavilion by James Harris

Five hundred tons of sand are piled up against the central wall, dividing the area beneath the roof into two.

The wall is kept upright by a number of diagonal metal braces, which prevent the weight of the sand from pushing it over and also transfer the cool temperature of the sand to the seating area on the other side of the retaining panel.

Roof over a pile of sand forms entrance to Design Miami 2013

On this side, visitors can rest in the shade on milled aluminium benches and beneath fans before entering the exhibition.

The designers intend the pile of sand to be sat on and played in. “We’re hoping to create something that people would want to participate in,” said practice co-founder Garrett Ricciardi when the design was released in October.

Roof over a pile of sand forms entrance to Design Miami 2013

The roof comprises a series of anodised aluminium trusses made by fabricator Neal Feay, which run lengthways and are connected by thin struts.

Dezeen is currently in Miami for the last leg of this year’s Dezeen and MINI World Tour and we’ll be posting video reports from the event soon.

Roof over a pile of sand forms entrance to Design Miami 2013

Last year visitors entered the exhibition space under a canopy of inflatable sausages designed by Snarkitecture. This year’s fair continues until Sunday.

Photography of the pavilion under construction is by Michael Landsberg.

Here’s some more text from Design Miami:


NYC-based architectural practice Formlessfinder to design a pavilion for Design Miami’s 2013 commission

Each December, Design Miami/ commissions early-career architects to build a designed environment for the fair’s entrance as part of its biannual Design Commissions program.

Harnessing multiple, often unexpected, properties of sand and aluminium, Formlessfinder’s Tent Pile pavilion provides shade, seating, cool air and a space to play for the city’s public. The pavilion appears as a dramatic aluminium roof miraculously balanced on the apex of a great pyramid of loose sand. Milled aluminium benches give resting space in the shade, where visitors will be fanned by the cool air naturally generated by the structure.

Roof over a pile of sand forms entrance to Design Miami 2013

Formlessfinder describes itself as a “formless” architectural practice – a studio where an expanded range of ideas, material considerations, construction techniques and user interactions all take priority over the shape of the final building. “Form is often the default lens for thinking about architecture. Even when people think they’re talking about something else, like function or structure, there’s often some kind of formal idea underlying the discussion. We’re trying to shift away from form so that we can explore other qualities of architecture, such as new ways of experiencing space or innovative ways of using materials,” explains Julian Rose, who co-founded the practice in 2010 with Garrett Ricciardi. The pair refer to their practice as a “finder” because it has a multifaceted output, which includes research projects and a forthcoming book. But while the theoretical aspect is important to its work, Formlessfinder still has the creation of physical structures at its heart.

Roof over a pile of sand forms entrance to Design Miami 2013

Formlessfinder approaches new projects with an interest in the specifics of geography and the use of available and appropriate materials, committing to use them in a way that allows for re-use. In researching ideas for Tent Pile at Design Miami/ 2013, Rose and Ricciardi ultimately focused on two phenomena very particular to Miami. The first was the ubiquity of sand in the region; those golden grains visible on the beaches also lie beneath the foundations of every building in the city and beyond. Any kind of construction in Miami must take into account the loose and shifting layer on which the final structure will ultimately float. The second was the architectural vernacular of the city; a kind of tropical post-war modernism distinguished by hybrid indoor/outdoor spaces of which the cantilevered roof seemed particularly emblematic. To design the roof and subsequent seating, the architects enlisted the support of materials powerhouse Alcoa and third-generation aluminium fabricator Neal Feay, both of which were integral in giving life to the ambitious truss design of the roof, executed in anodised aluminium.

Roof over a pile of sand forms entrance to Design Miami 2013

Formlessfinder’s pavilion takes the sand that is elsewhere so problematic and uses it to advantage. The sand which is so destabilising for architectural projects elsewhere in Miami here becomes the stabilising element of the structure, mooring the lightweight aluminium roof, in lieu of an excavated foundation, for the cantilever, while also being a zero-waste material, completely re-usable after its time at the pavilion.

Roof over a pile of sand forms entrance to Design Miami 2013

A retaining wall appears to slice the pyramid of sand in half, creating a more ordered space immediately in front of the entrance to the fair. Bench seating in a variety of sizes is provided by large sheets of aluminium fixed to simple wood bases, foregrounding the raw nature of the materials used. Arranged in a 500-ton pyramid the sand has a thermal mass cooling effect – metal fins driven through the retaining wall into the sand will draw the cool temperature into the seating area, and simple fans will create a refreshing breeze rippling out from the wall.

The pavilion acts as a refuge for the more than 50,000 visitors who come to Miami for the fairs each year, as well as inhabitants of the city’s South Beach neighbourhood. It is intended as a public installation that marries the practical requirements of shelter and seating to spectacular creative architectural ideas from a young practice. Formlessfinder’s Tent Pile engages not only with materials and aesthetics specific to Miami, but with the location of the fair within the city – the pyramid of sand is there to be sat on and played in, the cooling fans to be approached, examined and enjoyed. “We’re hoping to create something that people would want to participate in,” says Ricciardi, and the result is a structure designed to be occupied and explored, as much as it is to be admired.

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entrance to Design Miami
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Design+World event at Luminaire Lab during Design Miami

Daniel Widrig Kinesis 3D-printed body adornments at Luminaire Lab

Dezeen promotion: design brand Luminaire is presenting work by designers Tokujin Yoshioka, Patricia Urquiola and Daniel Widrig at an event in its exhibition space this Thursday evening, to coincide with Design Miami.

Elements Collection by Tokujin Yoshioka at Luminaire Lab
Elements Collection by Tokujin Yoshioka at Luminaire Lab

The Design+World event will showcase products in Luminaire’s range, including Yoshioka’s Elements tables with surfaces balanced on angled supports.

Patricia Urquiola Time to Make a Book cover
Patricia Urquiola Time to Make a Book cover

Spanish designer Patricia Urquiola’s recently published Time to Make A Book compendium will be available alongside art and design titles by Phaidon.

Daniel Widrig Kinesis 3D-printed body adornments
Daniel Widrig Kinesis 3D-printed body adornments (also main image)

Sinuous 3D-printed body adornments by designer and architect Daniel Widrig will debut at the event. Widrig’s Kinesis collection features undulating forms that wrap around the neck and over the shoulders, created using selective laser sintering.

Flow(t) glassware by Nao Tamura at Luminaire Lab
Flow(t) glassware by Nao Tamura at Luminaire Lab

Other pieces on display will include blown-glass ornaments by Italian studio Fabrica and glass pendants that look like fishing floats by Nao Tamura, plus more glassware by a variety of designers.

Drawing Glass by Fabrica at Luminaire Lab
Drawing Glass by Fabrica at Luminaire Lab

The event will take place from 6-9pm on Thursday 5 December 2013 at Luminaire Lab, 3901 NE 2nd Avenue, Miami, Florida – RSVP to attend here. Find out out more about the event on the Luminaire website.

Keep reading for more information from Luminaire:


Luminaire’s continued commitment to promoting good design and education culminate with the third instalment of Design+World, a comprehensive exhibition exploring how today’s designers are interpreting materials, technologies and production methods to create work which expands on the traditional boundaries of design. The exhibition will include works by Tokujin Yoshioka, Patricia Urquiola and Daniel Widrig. As well as exploring the culture of glass with Fabrica’s Drawing Glass, Nao Tamura’s poetic glass lighting and a selection of limited edition glass pieces from our own collection. Additionally, we will welcome Phaidon books to the showroom, bringing a preeminent voice in art and design to the design district.

Anna Torfs Moment Square Blue
Moment Square Blue by Anna Torfs

We look forward to meeting you this year at Design+World, and experience how innovation and imagination unite to impact the future of design across the globe.

Thursday 5 December 2013, 6-9pm
Luminaire Lab, 3901 NE 2nd Avenue, Miami, Florida

Drops vessels by Arcade
Drops vessels by Arcade

Daniel Widrig

Luminaire is thrilled to welcome London and Berlin-based designer, architect and artist Daniel Widrig to Design Miami and Art Basel Miami Beach 2013. As part of the installation, Design+World explores how today’s designers interpret materials, technologies and production methods to create work that expands the boundaries of design. Widrig’s lightweight and unique 3D-printed jewellery collection Kinesis complements the vision of this exhibition perfectly.

Kinesis 3D-printed body adornments by Daniel Widrig
Kinesis 3D-printed body adornments by Daniel Widrig

The soft, undulating pieces embrace the neckline and shoulders as an exoskeleton. Kinesis pushes the limits of selective laser sintering (SLS), gracefully transforming digital systems into wearable landscapes so artful, avant-garde and surreal that it feels otherworldly. The expressive, sinuous movement of Kinesis and its architectural character are akin to his early work as an architect when alongside his mentor, Zaha Hadid, he led a number of award-winning architectural projects, products and other designs.

Kinesis 3D-printed body adornments by Daniel Widrig
Kinesis 3D-printed body adornments by Daniel Widrig

Widrig graduate from the Architectural Association in London in 2006, and that same year started working with acclaimed architect Zaha Hadid. In 2009 he opened his own studio with a dedicated team of specialists in a broad range of fields including fashion, furniture, sculpture, stage design and architecture. Embracing digital systems since its early days, the studio holds a unique position in the field and is widely considered to be in the vanguard of digital art and design. In 2011 he worked with the fashion designer Iris Van Herpen to create an extraordinary series of 3D printed dresses, which was named one of the 50 Best Inventions of 2011 by Time Magazine.

www.luminaire.com

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Ross Lovegrove designs 3D-printed gold jewellery

Designer Ross Lovegrove will present a series of 3D-printed 18 carat gold rings at Design Miami next week.

Ross Lovegrove 3D-printed gold jewellery

Lovegrove has created six rings, each of which will be produced in an edition of ten. The series, called Foliates, will be presented by the Louisa Guinness Gallery at Design Miami.

Ross Lovegrove 3D-printed gold jewellery

“These rings and this collection appear is as if the very last virgin leaves of a tree or plant have unfurled from one’s hand so that there is a relationship between the finger and the leaf, the gold appearing from the delicate void that I find so feminine and sensual and unattended,” said Lovegrove.

Ross Lovegrove 3D-printed gold jewellery

The flat rounded forms that flow from the bands are indented with digitally created patterns designed to mimic those found in nature. Lovegrove experimented with processes such as direct metal laser sintering and combining 3D-printing in wax with lost-wax casting to achieve these intricate surface details.

Ross Lovegrove 3D-printed gold jewellery

Half of the designs in the range have a single leaf-shaped element, while the others each include a symmetrical pair.

Ross Lovegrove 3D-printed gold jewellery

“They sit lightly, exploring the dynamics of space and the digital realm, converging organic design with the nature of naturalness that underlines my life’s commitment to sourcing the trinity that can exist so succinctly when technology, materials and form converge in the advanced times in which we live,” Lovegrove continued.

Ross Lovegrove 3D-printed gold jewellery

A few days ago we featured 3D monograms for necklace pendants that are printed in silver and stainless steel.

Ross Lovegrove 3D-printed gold jewellery
Scale drawings of the six rings

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Flow(t) glassware by Nao Tamura at Luminaire Lab

Dezeen promotion: a chandelier of glass pendants that resemble fishing floats by designer Nao Tamura will be displayed at design brand Luminaire‘s exhibition space in Miami next month.

Flowt glassware by Nao Tamura at Luminaire Lab

Tamura‘s Flow(t) glassware comes in five droplet shapes and each is mounted on a black rod, reminiscent of plastic floats used by anglers.

Flowt glassware by Nao Tamura at Luminaire Lab

The frosted glass is coloured with green-blue tones representing the Venetian Lagoon.

Flowt glassware by Nao Tamura at Luminaire Lab

When hung together on thin threads, the pendants appear to float in midair on an invisible surface.

Flowt glassware by Nao Tamura at Luminaire Lab

The pieces will be installed during both Design Miami and Art Basel Miami Beach from 3 to 8 December at Luminaire Lab, 3901 NE 2nd Avenue, Miami, Florida – find out more about the event here.

Here’s some further details from Luminaire:


Nao Tamura’s designs eschew convention and status quo. Luminaire is proud to exhibit Tamura’s work during this year’s Art Basel-Design Miami installations. This being the second time Luminaire displays Nao’s work during Art Basel. Previously, Nao worked on a window design for the Miami Design District location.

Flowt glassware by Nao Tamura at Luminaire Lab

This year Luminaire will be presenting the Flow(t) chandelier. The designer, inspired by the colours of the Venetian lagoons reflecting the city lights, produced the chandelier embodying the beauty of the city world and its fantastical reflections in the lagoon. This poetic imagery and interpretation inspired Luminaire to include it in its third instalment of Design+World, an opportunity to showcase good design interpreted through different cultural approaches and mindsets.

Flowt glassware by Nao Tamura at Luminaire Lab

Nao Tamura’s quest to break with conventions brings us a new mindset and provides a unique and refreshing point of view. During Art Basel, Tamura’s contemporary chandelier will create a sculptural display of lighting set in play with the crystal collection also in exhibit.

We invite everyone to come and see the Flow(t) at Luminaire Lab, and experience Nao’s uncanny ability to find the emotional connection between her design and the audience.

www.luminaire.com

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Design Miami pavilion to feature a pile of sand

News: the entrance pavilion for the Design Miami collectors’ fair in December will comprise a mound of sand with an aluminium roof perched on top.

Designed by New York studio Formlessfinder, the temporary pavilion is conceived as a space that will encourage interaction and play from some of the 50,000 visitors to the annual Design Miami fair, which takes place in Miami Beach.

Design Miami Pavilion by Formlessfinder

“We’re hoping to create something that people would want to participate in,” said architect Garrett Ricciardi, who co-founded the studio with fellow architect Julian Rose. The pair expect visitors to lounge on the sand and adapt its shape.

They said the concept was developed in response to two of the city’s characteristics – its abundance of sand, beneath buildings as well as on the beaches, and the trend for cantilevered roofs.

Design Miami Pavilion by Formlessfinder

“Formlessfinder’s pavilion takes the sand that is elsewhere so problematic and uses it to advantage,” said the fair organisers. “The sand, which is so destabilising for architectural projects elsewhere in Miami, here becomes the stabilising element of the structure.”

A retaining wall will dissect the pavilion, separating the sandy hill from a seating area furnished with milled aluminium benches.

Design Miami Pavilion by Formlessfinder
Site plan – click for larger image

The sand will also draw cool air into the space, allowing it offer a comfortable and shaded environment for guests.

Design Miami has commissioned a new entrance pavilion each year since 2008. Last year’s structure was a cluster of inflatable sausages, while in 2011 David Adjaye created a wooden structure with a hollow belly.

Design Miami Pavilion by Formlessfinder
Section – click for larger image

Other interesting projects using sand include a concept for cooling units and a series of affordable houses in Cape Town.

See more design featuring sand »

Here’s some more information from Design Miami:


New York-based architectural practice Formlessfinder to design a pavilion for Design Miami’s 2013 Design Commission

Each December, Design Miami/ commissions early-career architects to build a designed environment for the fair’s entrance as part of its biannual Design Commissions program.

Harnessing multiple, often unexpected, properties of sand and aluminium, Formlessfinder’s Tent Pile pavilion provides shade, seating, cool air and a space to play for the city’s public. The pavilion appears as a dramatic aluminium roof miraculously balanced on the apex of a great pyramid of loose sand. Milled aluminium benches give resting space in the shade, where visitors will be fanned by the cool air naturally generated by the structure.

Formlessfinder describes itself as a ‘formless’ architectural practice – a studio where an expanded range of ideas, material considerations, construction techniques and user interactions all take priority over the shape of the final building. “Form is often the default lens for thinking about architecture. Even when people think they’re talking about something else, like function or structure, there’s often some kind of formal idea underlying the discussion. We’re trying to shift away from form so that we can explore other qualities of architecture, such as new ways of experiencing space or innovative ways of using materials,” explains Julian Rose, who co-founded the practice in 2010 with Garrett Ricciardi. The pair refer to their practice as a “finder” because it has a multifaceted output, which includes research projects and a forthcoming book. But while the theoretical aspect is important to its work, Formlessfinder still has the creation of physical structures at its heart.

Formlessfinder approaches new projects with an interest in the specifics of geography and the use of available and appropriate materials, committing to use them in a way that allows for re-use. In researching ideas for Tent Pile at Design Miami/ 2013, Rose and Ricciardi ultimately focused on two phenomena very particular to Miami. The first was the ubiquity of sand in the region; those golden grains visible on the beaches also lie beneath the foundations of every building in the city and beyond. Any kind of construction in Miami must take into account the loose and shifting layer on which the final structure will ultimately float. The second was the architectural vernacular of the city; a kind of tropical post-war modernism distinguished by hybrid indoor/outdoor spaces of which the cantilevered roof seemed particularly emblematic. To design the roof and subsequent seating, the architects enlisted the support of materials powerhouse Alcoa and third-generation aluminium fabricator Neal Feay, both of which were integral in giving life to the ambitious truss design of the roof, executed in raw aluminium.

Formlessfinder’s pavilion takes the sand that is elsewhere so problematic and uses it to advantage. The sand which is so destabilising for architectural projects elsewhere in Miami here becomes the stabilising element of the structure, mooring the lightweight aluminium roof, in lieu of an excavated foundation, for the cantilever, while also being a zero-waste material, completely re-usable after its time at the pavilion.

A retaining wall appears to slice the pyramid of sand in half, creating a more ordered space immediately in front of the entrance to the fair. Bench seating in a variety of sizes is provided by large sheets of aluminium fixed to simple wood bases, foregrounding the raw nature of the materials used. Arranged in a 500-ton pyramid the sand has a thermal mass cooling effect – metal fins driven through the retaining wall into the sand will draw the cool temperature into the seating area, and simple fans will create a refreshing breeze rippling out from the wall.

The pavilion acts as a refuge for the more than 50,000 visitors who come to Miami for the fairs each year, as well as inhabitants of the city’s South Beach neighbourhood. It is intended as a public installation that marries the practical requirements of shelter and seating to spectacular creative architectural ideas from a young practice. Formlessfinder’s Tent Pile engages not only with materials and aesthetics specific to Miami, but with the location of the fair within the city – the pyramid of sand is there to be sat on and played in, the cooling fans to be approached, examined and enjoyed. “We’re hoping to create something that people would want to participate in,” says Ricciardi, and the result is a structure designed to be occupied and explored, as much as it is to be admired.

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a pile of sand
appeared first on Dezeen.