The Shuttle Has Landed: NASA Signs Over Craft to Intrepid Museum After Contentious Fall

Dear citizens, we are happy to report that it appears that our long, national space war has finally come to an end. Despite an autumn full of controversy over whether or not New York’s Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum was prepared to take the Space Shuttle prototype NASA had awarded it after a spring full of heightened competition by museums across the country. Once an argument was raised that perhaps the Intrepid wasn’t quite as ready to receive the craft after making promises to the contrary to the space agency, other states jumped in, trying to win the craft in what they saw might be a second chance. Add to the issue that the museum then asked for $40 million in public funds to help build a new home for the ship, and things, at least from a PR perspective, seemed fairly rocky. However, that all seems like water under the bridge now, with this past weekend’s ceremony wherein NASA officially signed over the title to the Enterprise to the Intrepid (who knew there were titles for Space Shuttles, huh?), thus locking it in to New York for good. Senator Charles Schumer, who attended the ceremony, made extra sure to seal the deal and get those other states to back off, telling Space.com, “Let there be no bones about it, the Intrepid now officially owns a space shuttle and that’s going to stay for a very long time to come.” Here’s a statement about the transfer from NASA’s Administrator, Charles Bolden:

NASA is proud to transfer the title of space shuttle Enterprise to the Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum. The U.S.S. Intrepid had a rich history with NASA’s mission, and Enterprise – the pathfinder for the Space Shuttle Program – belongs in this historic setting. Enterprise, along with the rest of our shuttle fleet, is a national treasure and it will help inspire the next generation of explorers as we begin our next chapter of space exploration.

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Ordos Museum by MAD

Ordos Museum by MAD

Chinese architects MAD have sent us new images of a museum they completed earlier this year in the city of Ordos, in the Gobi desert.

Ordos Museum by MAD

Shaped like a large undulating blob, the Ordos Museum is clad in polished metal tiles that are resistant to frequently occurring sandstorms.

Ordos Museum by MAD

Galleries inside the museum are housed in smaller blobs, connected by bridges.

Ordos Museum by MAD

Entrances on both sides of the building allow local residents to use the atrium as a through-route.

Ordos Museum by MAD

You can watch a movie about the building here.

Ordos Museum by MAD

This isn’t the first high-profile project in Ordos, the newly constructed city for a million people – artist Ai Weiwei masterplanned 100 private villas by different architects there back in 2008 – see all our stories about the project here.

Ordos Museum by MAD

Photography is by Iwan Baan. More images of this project can be found on his website.

Here’s some more information from MAD:


MAD’s Ordos Museum Completes

Construction of the MAD designed Ordos Museum has recently been completed in fall 2011. Familiar yet distinct, the museum appears to have either landed in the desert from another world or to always have existed. From atop a dune- like urban plaza, the building is enriched with a convergence of naturalistic interiors, bathed in light. The result is a timeless architecture in a modern city of ruins.

Ordos Museum by MAD

Six years ago, the Inner Mongolia Ordos was an extended landscape of the majestic Gobi desert. Today, it is a urban centre mired in a common controversy in modern Chinese civilization: the conflict between the people’s long standing traditions and their dreams of the future. Architects are asked to develop the urban landscape and yet need to be mindful of the delicate sustenance of minority cultures and its future potentials. In 2005, the local bureaucrats established a new master plan for its city development. Upon the initialization of this master plan, MAD was commissioned by the Ordos city government to conceive a museum to be a centerpiece to the new great city.

Ordos Museum by MAD

Influenced by Buckminster Fuller’s geodesic domes, MAD envisioned a mysterious abstract form capable of fostering an alternate, timeless development of Chinese tradition and future. Whilst the surface of this shape functions as a metal container critical to protect the interior from the harsh winters and frequent sand storms of the region, metaphorically this external layer operates as a shield protecting the precious culture and history of the city from the unknown growth of the city. The museum appears to float over a waving sand hill, a gesture saluting the landscapes which have now been supplanted by the streets and buildings of the new cityscape. This plaza is now a favorite amongst the locals who gather their families and friends to explore, play or lounge in the pleasant landscape.

Ordos Museum by MAD

Entering the museum presents visitors with a strong contrast to the exterior: an airy monumental cave flushed with natural light through skylights. The cave links to a canyon which carves out a void between the galleries and exhibition hall and is brightly illuminated at the top. Patrons maneuver along the base of these primitive surroundings and through the light across mid-air tectonic bridges, reminiscent of the intersection of the past and the future of the Gobi landscape. Visitors will repeatedly cross these sky bridges and reflect upon their journey from a variety of picturesque vantages.

Ordos Museum by MAD

The local community, as well, is encouraged to pass through the base of the central canyon which connects the two public entries at opposite ends without entering the exhibition hall or galleries. The varying internalized flows of circulation are guided by a succession of light and shadow, at times mysteriously shaded and occasionally brilliantly bright yet consistently engaging.

Ordos Museum by MAD

For the museum employees, a south facing, naturally lit interior garden is shared by the office and research programmes of the museum, creating a natural work environment.

The completion of the museum has provided the local citizens a place to embrace and reflect upon the fast paced development of their city. People meet organically in the naturalistic landscapes of the museum, an intersection of natural and human development.

Ordos Museum by MAD

Location: Ordos, China Typology: Museum
Site Area: 27,760 sqm Building Area: 41, 227 sqm Building Height: 40 m

Directors: Ma Yansong, Yosuke Hayano, Dang Qun
Design Team: Shang Li, Andrew C. Bryant, Howard Jiho Kim, Matthias Helmreich, Linda Stannieder, Zheng Tao, Qin Lichao, , Sun Jieming, Yin Zhao, Du Zhijian, Yuan Zhongwei, Yuan Ta, Xie Xinyu, Liu Weiwei, Felipe Escudero, Sophia Tang, Diego Perez, Art Terry, Jtravis B Russett, Dustin Harris

Associate Engineers: China Institute of Building Standard Design & Research Mechanical Engineer: The Institute of Shanxi Architectural Design and Research
Façade/cladding Consultants: SuP Ingenieure GmbH, Melendez & Dickinson Architects Construction Contractor: Huhehaote construction Co., Ltd
Façade Contractor: Zhuhai King Glass Engineering CO.LTD

MSU’s Broad Art Museum Hires New Curator, Preps Debut Exhibitions

1214broadground.jpg

The Eli and Edythe Broad Art Museum at Michigan State University continues its pace toward becoming a real, full-fledged institution with two new announcements this week. First, following the hiring of their first director, Michael Rush, last summer, they’ve now landed Alison Gass as their new curator of contemporary art. Gass, who was picked last year by the NY Times‘ as one of nine up and coming curators, has worked in New York for the Jewish Museum, the MoMA, and the Brooklyn Museum, and most recently on the other coast as an assistant curator at the SFMOMA. Second in the new news, the Broad recently announced its first two debut exhibitions:

The Broad/MSU’s inaugural exhibitions, curated by founding director Michael Rush, include “Global Groove 1973/2012,” which will use Nam June Paik’s seminal 1973 video “Global Groove” as a jumping off point to explore current trends in international video art, and “In Search of Time,” which will investigate artists’ expressions of time and memory by creating dialogues among works by artists including Josef Albers, Romare Bearden, Damien Hirst, Toba Khadoori, Andy Warhol, Eadweard Muybridge and Sam Jury, among others.

The Broad Museum, in its nifty new Zaha Hadid-designed building, is set to open on April 21st of next year.

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Trisha Donnelly, Rashid Johnson Among Artists Shortlisted for 2012 Hugo Boss Prize

hugobossprize.jpgFaced with the daunting challenge of following Hans-Peter Feldmann‘s crowd-pleasing take on prize-money-as-artwork are the six artists shortlisted for the 2012 Hugo Boss Prize. Administered by the Guggenheim Foundation, the $100,000 prize is awarded every other year to an artist who has made an important contribution to contemporary art. Past winners include Emily Jacir, Matthew Barney, and Pierre Huyghe. The finalists for the prize’s ninth incarnation are Trisha Donnelly, Rashid Johnson, Qiu Zhijie, Monika Sosnowska, Danh Vo, and Tris Vonna-Michell. The winner will be selected by a jury chaired by Guggenheim curator Nancy Spector and announced next fall. In addition to a cool tetrahedral trophy (pictured) that resembles the coveted Triforce from The Legend of Zelda, the winning artist also gets a show at New York’s Guggenheim Museum in 2013.

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Jerry Saltz Dismisses Carsten Höller Exhibition as ‘Arty Junk Food’ While New Museum Raises Ticket Prices to Meet Demand

Jerry Saltz may absolutely hate the New Museum‘s Carsten Höller exhibition, “Experience,” but he seems perhaps alone in a city that is clamoring to get in. Calling it “arty junk food” and writing that “nothing provides much in terms of form, social commentary, or the willful transformation of materials,” Saltz takes issue in New York‘s year-end recap with not just the Höller exhibition, but all shows that turn museums as playgrounds (semi-surprisingly he includes Marina Abramovic‘s controversial LAMOCA fundraiser in this camp). But like we said at the opening, it appears that the critic’s camp is less full than those embracing it. NewYorkology was the first to break the story that, due to overall demand to see the Höller exhibition, the New Museum is hiking up its entry fee from $12 to $16, to help cover the cost of the extra staff they need to run it (which makes sense once you see that 102-foot slide). However, worry not, people who only have $12 to their name: the New Museum tells the site that the new rate “is most likely not a permanent increase.”

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Miami Art Museum Runs into Major Push Back Over Proposed Name Change

What’s in a name? If you’re a publicly funded museum, plenty it seems. In Miami, now in the tail end of this year’s Art Basel, the controversy du jour is over the Miami Art Museum‘s announcement that it will be renaming itself the Jorge M. Perez Art Museum of Miami-Dade County after the wealthy real estate developer donated $35 million toward the construction of the organization’s new Herzog & de Meuron-designed building. While there’s nothing incredibly unique about this, as you’d be hard pressed to not be able to find a named-cultural institution in any major city anywhere in the world. So why the problem? The Miami Herald offers up this great overview of the issue, ranging from the fact that Perez’s donation will only a portion of the funds needed while the public coffers will be sending over $103 million and that the developer isn’t the most popular in the city right now due to perceptions that he overbuilt luxury buildings during the real estate boom and now many of his towers stand empty. Add to that some general anger against the extremely-wealthy thanks in part to both the economy and groups like the Occupy Wall Street movement and the picture’s starting to get a bit clearer. However, it isn’t just chatter. The paper writes about the fall out from the renaming, including board members resigning and even a full page newspaper ad taken out by the museum’s former president, speaking out against it. On the other side of the debate, the NY Times provides the museum’s side of it, as well as giving some more positive background on Perez himself. And now, of course, we must mention that we would happily change our name to the [Your Name Here] Blog About Design Stuff for just $25 million. Cheap!

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Cooper-Hewitt Completes $54 Million Capital Campaign, Hires Seb Chan as Digital Media Director

In the throes of a massive renovation, the Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum is a hive of design news. Today the institution announced that it has raised the $54 million required for the overhaul, a collaboration between design architect Gluckman Mayner Architects and executive architect Beyer Blinder Belle that will increase Cooper-Hewitt’s exhibition space by 60 percent (to approximately 16,000 square feet), as well as reconfigure conservation and collection-storage facilities. Meanwhile, much progress has already been made: renovation is complete on the museum’s two townhouses, which house the—new and improved!—National Design Library, the master’s program in the history of decorative arts and design, and administrative offices. Now comes the main event: renovating the Carnegie Mansion, a task that entails historic preservation (including restoring the exterior masonry and freshening up the wrought-iron fence) and is aiming for LEED certification. When the museum reopens in 2013, visitors will discover a spectacular, new third-floor gallery where the library used to be, as well as expanded and restored galleries on first and second floors.

“It is thrilling to see our vision for Cooper-Hewitt’s redesign becoming a reality,” said Bill Moggridge, director of the museum, in a statement issued today. “Restoring and transforming the Carnegie Mansion and elevating and expanding the museum’s online user experience will broadly increase access to the museum’s rich resources, scholarship, and collections.” Renovation on the digital front will be masterminded by Aussie tech guru Seb Chan, the newly appointed director of digital and emerging media. He comes to Cooper-Hewitt from the the Powerhouse Museum in Sydney, where he brought the museum’s collection online, integrated digital content production into everyday practices, and pioneered the use of mobile devices, QR codes, and iPads to deliver gallery experiences. Chan names “increasing public access while communicating the important role of design in building a better world” as among his top priorities for Cooper-Hewitt. Tonight mediabistro.com founder and hostess with the mostest Laurel Touby opens her home for a party to welcome Chan and toast to successful expansion in the physical and virtual worlds.

continued…

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Red-Letter Day: Valentino Unveils Virtual Museum

“If somebody thought that when Valentino and I stopped working, we’d be sitting in Central Park feeding the pigeons, they’d better change their mind,” said Giancarlo Giametti, seated beside his longtime partner this morning at New York’s Museum of Modern Art. “Because we’re not going to stop.” The debonair duo chose an actual museum as the setting to unveil their digital one: the Valentino Garavani Virtual Museum, which launched today as a free app. Designed and produced over the last two years by Novacom Associés and Kinmonth Monfreda for a sum that Giametti would describe only as “a lot of money,” the ambitious initiative showcases five decades of fashion history in thematically organized virtual galleries—each one illuminated by sun streaming through portals to a blue, cloud-strewn “Roma sky”—of Valentino dresses along with more than 5,000 archival photos, videos, and documents such as sketches and advertising campaigns. Meanwhile, the designer himself is something of a Luddite. “I am completely out of these mechanical things,” he said at this morning’s press conference. “I arrived at one of my houses and wanted to watch a DVD, and I had to call down to the town for a guy to come help me play it, but this is about the future.” Giametti explained that the virtual museum will continue to evolve, making use of new technologies and adding more rooms as well as “masterclasses” by leading fashion figures and critics. “I still love design and clothes,” added the 79-year-old Valentino of his own ongoing role in contributing to the museum. “And I’m going to do unbelievable drawings of new creations.”

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Natural History Museum of Utah by Ennead Architects and GSBS Architects

Natural History Museum of Utah by Ennead Architects and GSBS Architects

Faceted rock-like walls line a towering atrium inside a museum of natural history that opened this week in Salt Lake City.

Natural History Museum of Utah by Ennead Architects and GSBS Architects

Above: photograph is by Stuart Ruckman

Designed by Todd Schliemann of New York studio Ennead Architects, the Natural History Museum of Utah is arranged on a series of stepped plates that climb a hillside.

Natural History Museum of Utah by Ennead Architects and GSBS Architects

Above: photograph is by Stuart Ruckman

Shimmering copper panels wrap the upper floors of the five-storey building, above a base of concrete and glazing.

Natural History Museum of Utah by Ennead Architects and GSBS Architects

The 18-metre-high atrium divides the building into two halves, separating exhibition areas in the south from research laboratories and offices to the north.

Natural History Museum of Utah by Ennead Architects and GSBS Architects

Bridges cross the atrium to connect galleries with research laboratories on the second and third floors.

Natural History Museum of Utah by Ennead Architects and GSBS Architects

Above: photograph is by Stuart Ruckman

Local firm GSBS Architects collaborated with Ennead Architects to deliver the building.

Natural History Museum of Utah by Ennead Architects and GSBS Architects

Above: photograph is by Stuart Ruckman

We recently published another museum with an impressive atrium – see our earlier story about an art museum in Israel.

Natural History Museum of Utah by Ennead Architects and GSBS Architects

Photography is by Jeff Goldberg/Esto, apart from where otherwise stated.

Natural History Museum of Utah by Ennead Architects and GSBS Architects

Here’s some more text from Ennead Architects:


Natural History Museum of Utah
Salt Lake City, Utah 2011

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. 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.

Natural History Museum of Utah by Ennead Architects and GSBS Architects

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.

Natural History Museum of Utah by Ennead Architects and GSBS Architects

Above: photograph is by Ben Lowry

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.

Natural History Museum of Utah by Ennead Architects and GSBS Architects

Above: photograph is by Ben Lowry

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.

Natural History Museum of Utah by Ennead Architects and GSBS Architects

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.

Natural History Museum of Utah by Ennead Architects and GSBS Architects

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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.

Natural History Museum of Utah by Ennead Architects and GSBS Architects

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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.

Natural History Museum of Utah by Ennead Architects and GSBS Architects

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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.

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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.

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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.

Natural History Museum of Utah by Ennead Architects ans GSBS Architects

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Design Team
Design Architect: Ennead Architects
Design Partner: Todd Schliemann FAIA
Management Partner: Don Weinreich AIA, LEED AP

Natural History Museum of Utah by Ennead Architects ans GSBS Architects

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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

Natural History Museum of Utah by Ennead Architects and GSBS Architects

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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

Natural History Museum of Utah by Ennead Architects ans GSBS Architects

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Project Architect: Valerie Nagasawa AIA
Interiors: Stephanie DeMott IIDA, Stacy Butcher LEED AP, Beccah Hardman
Project Team: Clio Miller AIA, LEED AP, Jesse Allen AIA, LEED AP, Bill Cordray AIA, Jennifer Still AIA, Eduardo De Roda, Felissia Ludwig, Cathy Davison, Todd Kelsey, Seth Robertson, Robert Bowman AIA

National Museum of American History Sends Staffers to Collect Occupy Wall Street Objects

You know you’ve made at least something of a mark in history when you spot employees of the Smithsonian‘s National Museum of American History rummaging around. Like at this spring’s massive protests in Wisconsin and during President Obama‘s inauguration, the museum has been sending out staffers to find historical-seeming things surrounding the Occupy Wall Street movements. While, per usual, this isn’t for any specific upcoming exhibition, but instead is a regular effort to fill their archives with items that tell the story of our times. So down thirty or forty years down the line, you may wind up seeing that sign you’d forgotten to pick back up at that protest so long ago in some sort of “Remember the ’10s”. Then you can go next door to the “Remember the ’20s” hall and see the items that were a part of the famous Jetpack Revolution. Here’s a bit:

Most recently, the Museum sent representatives to collect materials related to what has become known as the Occupy Wall Street protests and the various offshoots. This is part of the museum’s long tradition of documenting how Americans participate in the life of the nation. The Museum collects from contemporary events because many of these materials are ephemeral and if not collected immediately, are lost to the historical record.

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