RALEIGH, NC.- The North Carolina Museum of Art has been selected by Architectural Record as one of the top 125 most important works of architecture built since the magazines founding in 1891. The publication recognized the Museums West Building, which was designed by New Yorkbased architects Thomas Phifer and Partners and North Carolinabased landscape architects Surface 678 (then Lappas + Havener), and which opened in 2010. The list of 125 buildings was created by Architectural Record editors to commemorate the magazines 125th anniversary.
The Museum is honored to be recognized by Architectural Record, one of the most distinguished and world-renowned architectural publications, says director Lawrence J. Wheeler. Were incredibly proud to be ranked among such significant and innovative buildings from around the globe.
Glass and aluminum-clad with striking simplicity and state-of-the-art environmental features, the Museums West Building has an open floor plan reinforcing connections to art across time and culture. Adjacent to the 1983 building designed by Edward Durrell Stone, the single-story building was created specifically to showcase the Museums wide-ranging permanent collection and features a central sculpture hall and 40 galleries. With the exterior 50 percent glass, the 127,000-square-foot space has an innovative day lighting system to bathe the collection in an even glow of natural light, illuminating colors in Old Master paintings as originally intended. Landscaped sculpture gardens, courtyards, and reflecting pools surround the building and connect seamlessly to the Museums 164-acre Park.
It was a privilege to work with the architectural firm Thomas Phifer and Partners on the planning and creation of our West Building, says the NCMAs director of planning and design Dan Gottlieb. It showcases our collection in a setting equal to the quality of the artwork it contains. The elegance of its day-lit galleries and garden courtyards perfectly embodies our philosophy of connecting art, nature, and people.
The West Building opened in April 2010. This fall the NCMA will complete a yearlong redesign and transformation of the Museum campus by expanding the NCMA Park. The projectwhich will introduce a new elliptical lawn, tree-lined parking, contemporary gardens, a promenade connecting Park and galleries, and significant public art installations by international artistscontinues the Museums mission of providing memorable and creative experiences with both art and nature.