The Whitney Museum / Renzo Piano Building Workshop + Cooper Robertson

By AD Editorial Team

Architects: Renzo Piano Building Workshop, Cooper Robertson
Location: 99 Gansevoort Street, New York, NY 10014, USA
Partners In Charge: M.Carroll, E.Trezzani
Partner In Charge : Scott Newman, FAIA
Area: 7520.0 sqm
Year: 2015
Photographs: Nic Lehoux, Timothy Schenck, Karin Jobst

Design Team: K.Schorn, T.Stewart, S.Ishida (partner), A.Garritano, F.Giacobello, I.Guzman, G.Melinotov, L. Priano, L.Stuart, C. Chabaud, J.Jones, G.Fanara, M.Fleming, D.Piano, J.Pejkovic
Cad Operator: M.Ottonello
Models: F.Cappellini, F.Terranova, I.Corsaro
Structure: Robert Silman Associates
Mep, Fire Prevention: Jaros, Baum & Bolles
Lighting: Arup
Facade Engineering: Heintges & Associates
Civil Engineering: Phillip Habib & Associates
Theatre Equipment: Theatre Projects
Audiovisual Equipment, Acoustics: Cerami & Associates
Landscaping: Piet Oudolf, Mathews Nielson
Leed Consultant: Viridian Energy Environmental
Construction Manager: Turner Construction
Project Manager Cooper Robertson : Thomas Wittrock, AIA, LEED AP
Sr Technical Manager Cooper Robertson : Thomas Holzmann
Project Architect Cooper Robertson : Greg Weithman, AIA
Design Team Cooper Robertson : Kieran Trihey, AIA, LEED AP, Weifang Lin, AIA, LEED AP, Erin Flynn, RA, LEED AP, Christopher Payne, AIA, LEED AP, Annalisa Guzzini, Eric Ball, Atara Margolies, LEED AP, German Carmona, Jenelle Kelpe, Marlena Lacher, Eric Boorstyn, Jeremy Boon-Bordenave
Interiors Cooper Robertson : Lori Weatherly
Project Administrator Cooper Robertson : Lauren Weisbrod

From the architect. The Whitney Museum is building itself a new home in downtown Manhattan’s Meatpacking District. Due to open in 2015, the project will substantially enlarge the Whitney’s exhibition and programming space, enabling the first comprehensive view of the Museum’s growing collection, which today comprises more than 19,000 works of modern and contemporary American art.

Founded in 1930, the Whitney moved to its current Madison Avenue home, designed by Marcel Breuer, in 1966. At the time, its collection numbered some 2,000 pieces of 20th-century American art, so its nearly 100-fold expansion needs space to flourish. The new museum is to be situated in New York’s vibrant Meatpacking District. Fronting onto Gansevoort Street, the site lies between the Hudson and the High Line, Manhattan’s recently completed elevated urban park, built on a disused elevated spur of the 1930s New York Central Railroad.

Clad in pale blue-grey steel panels, the new, eight-storey building is powerfully asymmetrical, with the bulk of the full-height museum to the west, Hudson-side, with tiers of lighter terraces and glazed walkways stepping down to the High Line, embracing it into the project.

The Museum is entered via a dramatically cantilevered ‘largo’, a public space that serves as a kind of decompression chamber between street and museum, a shared space, with views to the Hudson and the High Line entrance just a few steps away. Accessed from the ‘largo’, the main entrance lobby also serves as a public gallery – of free-entry exhibition space.

Level three houses a 170-retractible seat theatre with double-height views over the Hudson River, along with technical spaces and offices.

Some 50,000 sq. ft (4 650 sq. m) of gallery space is distributed over levels five, six, seven and eight, the fifth level boasting a 18,000 sq ft (1670 sq. m), column-free gallery – making it the largest open-plan museum gallery in New York City. This gallery is reserved for temporary exhibitions and its expansive volume will enable the display of really large works of contemporary art. The permanent collection is exhibited on two floors, level six and seven. These two floors also step back towards the west to create 13,000 sq ft (1 200 sq. m) of outdoor sculpture terraces.

Museum offices, education centre, conservation laboratories and library reading room are situated north of the building’s core on levels three to seven, including a multi-use theatre for film, video and performance on level five.

Finally, on the top floor is the ‘studio’ gallery and a café, naturally lit by a skylight system in saw-tooth configuration.

The Whitney Museum / Renzo Piano Building Workshop + Cooper Robertson © Nic Lehoux
The Whitney Museum / Renzo Piano Building Workshop + Cooper Robertson © Nic Lehoux
The Whitney Museum / Renzo Piano Building Workshop + Cooper Robertson © Nic Lehoux
The Whitney Museum / Renzo Piano Building Workshop + Cooper Robertson © Nic Lehoux
The Whitney Museum / Renzo Piano Building Workshop + Cooper Robertson © Nic Lehoux
The Whitney Museum / Renzo Piano Building Workshop + Cooper Robertson © Nic Lehoux
The Whitney Museum / Renzo Piano Building Workshop + Cooper Robertson © Timothy Schenck
The Whitney Museum / Renzo Piano Building Workshop + Cooper Robertson © Nic Lehoux
The Whitney Museum / Renzo Piano Building Workshop + Cooper Robertson © Nic Lehoux
The Whitney Museum / Renzo Piano Building Workshop + Cooper Robertson © Timothy Schenck
The Whitney Museum / Renzo Piano Building Workshop + Cooper Robertson © Timothy Schenck
The Whitney Museum / Renzo Piano Building Workshop + Cooper Robertson © Karin Jobst
The Whitney Museum / Renzo Piano Building Workshop + Cooper Robertson © Nic Lehoux
The Whitney Museum / Renzo Piano Building Workshop + Cooper Robertson © Nic Lehoux
The Whitney Museum / Renzo Piano Building Workshop + Cooper Robertson © Nic Lehoux
The Whitney Museum / Renzo Piano Building Workshop + Cooper Robertson Lobby Floor Plan
The Whitney Museum / Renzo Piano Building Workshop + Cooper Robertson Fifth Floor Plan
The Whitney Museum / Renzo Piano Building Workshop + Cooper Robertson Sixth Floor Plan
The Whitney Museum / Renzo Piano Building Workshop + Cooper Robertson Seventh Floor Plan
The Whitney Museum / Renzo Piano Building Workshop + Cooper Robertson Eighth Floor Plan
The Whitney Museum / Renzo Piano Building Workshop + Cooper Robertson North Elevation
The Whitney Museum / Renzo Piano Building Workshop + Cooper Robertson South Elevation
The Whitney Museum / Renzo Piano Building Workshop + Cooper Robertson East Elevation
The Whitney Museum / Renzo Piano Building Workshop + Cooper Robertson West Elevation
The Whitney Museum / Renzo Piano Building Workshop + Cooper Robertson Longitudinal Section
The Whitney Museum / Renzo Piano Building Workshop + Cooper Robertson Cross Section
The Whitney Museum / Renzo Piano Building Workshop + Cooper Robertson Detail 1
The Whitney Museum / Renzo Piano Building Workshop + Cooper Robertson Detail 2
The Whitney Museum / Renzo Piano Building Workshop + Cooper Robertson Detail 3
The Whitney Museum / Renzo Piano Building Workshop + Cooper Robertson Detail 4
The Whitney Museum / Renzo Piano Building Workshop + Cooper Robertson Drawing

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