WEST PALM BEACH, FL.- The Norton Museum of Art will launch its transformational expansion project, designed by architecture firm Foster + Partners, with a ceremonial groundbreaking on February 6, 2016. The groundbreaking precedes the evenings annual Gala celebrating the Museums 75th anniversary. Pritzker-Prize winning architect Lord Norman Foster, Norton Executive Director Hope Alswang, and Norton Board of Trustees Chairman Harry Howell will be joined by an audience of invited guests for this momentous event, which kicks off construction of the new West Wing.
As the Norton celebrates its 75th anniversary, we applaud founder Ralph Nortons generosity and foresight, while looking toward the future, Alswang said. With design development complete, I am excited that the Norton Museum of Art is set to break ground on the Foster + Partners-designed expansion and poised for a remarkable transformation.
Scheduled to open in 2018, the transformed West Wing includes a monumental entrance, a 35% increase in gallery space to showcase the Museums collection and inventive exhibitions, a state-of-the-art 210-seat auditorium, increased education space, and a great hall that will become the Museums social hub. A sculpture garden and additional green spaces will provide new areas for the Nortons programming, creating a museum in a garden on the 6.3-acre campus.
Design Highlights
The Museum, which opened in 1941, was initially conceived by architect Marion Sims Wyeth as an elegant series of Art Deco-inspired pavilions organized around a central courtyard. Visitors entered from the east, and from its front door enjoyed a direct view to the Intracoastal Waterway. As the museum outgrew its original footprint, it added new multi-story spaces and moved its main entrance to face south. The Foster + Partners plan relocates the entry to the west, giving the Norton a distinctive, welcoming presence on South Dixie Highway while reestablishing the symmetry and clarity of the original Wyeth design.
The Heyman Plaza, the new entry forecourt, will feature the serene Michelle and Joseph Jacobs Reflecting Pool and will be sheltered under a monumental, 43-foot-high, semi-reflective metal canopy that floats unsupported 45 feet beyond the face of the building. A scalloped-shaped cutout in the canopy respects a majestic 80-year-old, 65-foot-tall banyan tree.
The new event spaces adjacent to the forecourt include the 210-seat state-of-the-art Stiller Family Foundation Auditorium, the Jane and Leonard Korman Special Event Room, and the Leonard and Evelyn Lauder Dining Pavilion, which will offer garden-facing, terrace seating in the John and Marjorie McGraw Garden Terrace. At the center of these spaces is the Ruth and Carl Shapiro Great Hall, a magnificent 3,600 square foot, 43-foot-tall space, which, when not specially configured for events, will serve as the Museums living room with lounge seating, a coffee bar, piano, and book carts. Some of the Great Halls walls will serve as canvases for commissioned, temporary art installations. The west-facing wall will feature a 10-x-28-foot-tall window which will admit dappled light, filtered by the leaves and branches of the banyan tree. These distinct spaces can be used independently for a variety of programs, after hours or during regular operating hours.
The expansion also includes 12,000 square feet of new gallery space for the Nortons robust cultural programming, which includes annual exhibitions by groundbreaking women artists and biennial exhibitions by emerging photographers, as well as showcasing the Museums distinguished photography holdings and collections of American, Chinese, European and contemporary art. The J. Ira and Nicki Harris Family Gallery will feature a 150-foot-long exhibition space characterized by a colonnade with large windows through which visitors can enjoy garden views. The new William Randolph Hearst Education Center is more than one-and-a-half times the size of the existing education space. It will offer two new classrooms and a student gallery that will allow for expanded workshops and classes for youth, adults, and families.
The New Norton is conceived of as a museum in a garden. To achieve this vision, 20,000 square feet of lawns and plantings will replace the existing parking lot at the current museum entrance. The gardens are being designed by Kathryn Gustafson of Gustafson Guthrie Nichol and consist of a 9,000-square-foot event lawn, the Pamela and Robert B. Goergen Sculpture Garden, walkways, and a secluded shade garden. The lawn will support formal and informal events with ample room for parties and evening films while all garden spaces are designed to enhance the display of outdoor sculpture.
South of the garden, six Museum-owned historic homes are being restored. Two of these have been completed and connected, named Karp House, and now serve as the Directors Residence. The remaining four will serve as houses and studios for the Museums artist-in-residence program.
Lord Foster, Founder and Chairman, Foster + Partners, describes the project this way: The new extension of the museum represents an exciting opportunity to place the reinvigorated Norton at the heart of Floridas cultural life and to establish its international presence, allowing more people to enjoy the museums very special collection. Reinforcing its natural setting with a museum in a garden, our aim has been to restore a sense of clarity to the existing building by reasserting the logic of the original plan; creating new event and visitor spaces that will transform the museum into the social heart of the community; as well as increasing the gallery and exhibition spaces, to engage with a wider audience, both local and national.