Zumthor Downsizes LACMA 10%
The environmental impact report on Peter Zumthor's LACMA project has been delayed about as long as the Mueller report. Unlike the latter, the LACMA EIR is now available to all on the L.A. County website. It calls for a roughly 10 percent reduction in the building's area (347,000 sf., down from 387,500 announced in Oct. 2017 and 392,871 for the current buildings). Other changes include elimination of the high-ceiling "chapel" galleries and new, rectilinear shapes for the seven pavilions supporting the elevated gallery level.
The 10 percent haircut won't please those who feel the new structure was already too small for an expensive, hard-to-expand building. The chapel galleries were by far the most distinctive features of previous renderings of the interior. I liked them as architecture, yet suspected they were out of scale for the pre-contemporary art they would be showing. LACMA does not own the Colossus of Rhodes.
From the outside, the latest design seems more comfortable in its flatness. The color appears to be a shade lighter (it started out Tar Pit Black, then moved to Sand). The new renderings make the most believable case for how the Zumthor building might work at street level. It's less freeway underpass, more urban and urbane.
UPDATE: More on Zumthor LACMA here.
Old rendering of a "chapel gallery" (eliminated in new design) |
From the outside, the latest design seems more comfortable in its flatness. The color appears to be a shade lighter (it started out Tar Pit Black, then moved to Sand). The new renderings make the most believable case for how the Zumthor building might work at street level. It's less freeway underpass, more urban and urbane.
UPDATE: More on Zumthor LACMA here.
Comments
Robert Mueller needs to investigate whether Michael Govan and Peter Zumthor colluded with Russia to destroy the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. In this case, Guilty!!
Also, I think it’s short-sighted to think that LACMA won’t be in need of expansion in the future. (I’m sure they felt that way in the 60s too). That’s there’s no need to give some leeway for future projects. LA is only in the early stages of it’s art capital and philanthropic reputation. I don’t think I’m being optimistic to say that LA’s collection could grow as big as Chicago or NYC’s flagship museums, both over 1M square feet, and still not enough.
Just where did this project go completely off the rails?