KANSAS CITY, MO.- Following a late-November request for proposals, The
Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art has chosen five design teams from a pool of 15 to construct a temporary pavilion on the museum grounds to coincide with the exhibition Inventing the Modern World: Decorative Arts at the Worlds Fairs 18511939, which opens April 14. A panel of judges, including Bloch Building architect Steven Holl, will choose the winning design, which will be announced on Feb. 1.
Designers and architects were encouraged to work in collaborative teams. The five teams competing are:
• Ex3: Hufft Projects, Edwin Blue, Derek Porter Studio, and artist Lea Griggs
• Sun Pavilion : Generator Studio, artist Tm Gratkowski, Brightergy Solar Solutions, Thorton Tomasetti
• Praxino-Scape: AECOM, t2, Centric Projects, Zahner Company, Brightergy Solar Solutions, Thornton Tomasetti, Cultivate Kansas City, UMKC Department of Architecture, Urban Planning and Design
• Nimbus: Echomaterico
• A Temporary Front Porch: el dorado inc, DESIGN+MAKE (a Kansas State University graduate architecture studio), Derek Porter Studio, Burns and McDonnell , Planet ReUse, Kansas City Habitat ReStore
The teams will make a presentation to selected Nelson-Atkins staff later in January, and the winning team will be decided by a panel of judges including Holl.
We are delighted with the number of proposals we received in such a short time, said Zugazagoitia. This project has piqued the interest of designers and architects around the world, and it is very exciting to look through these innovative designs.
Pavilions were the traditional gathering places for worlds fairs, which debuted the most important technological and stylistic advancements on an international stage. The guidelines for the pavilion project were specific. The teams were encouraged to employ innovative materials and could not expect the museum to contribute more than $20,000 to the budget.
The pavilion project showcases the innovation and creativity that worlds fairs promoted, said Futter. This brings our exhibition into the 21st century by celebrating the very latest in architecture and design.
Proposals were submitted from around the world by a variety of designers and architects, including the 8-year-old daughter of an architect in Kansas City. The pavilion will be open to the public during the Inventing the Modern World exhibition, which runs from April 14 to Aug. 19.