Broad Contemporary Art Museum, Los Ángeles
Architect: Renzo Piano Building Workshop
Year: 2008
Location: Los Angeles, United States
Category: Cultural / Museum
Status: Built
About
The scope of this project was to fuse the scattered buildings of Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) into a cohesive campus with new public spaces, new exhibition spaces and a strong visual identity for the museum. The first phase introduced the BP Grand Entrance, the Broad Contemporary Art Museum (BCAM), and pedestrian connections through the site. The second phase was the construction of the Resnick Pavilion for temporary art exhibitions. At the heart of the project is the BP Grand Entrance, where the ticket office is located. Featuring a steel canopy, the open-air pavilion seems to float over a vast courtyard that opens northwards to Hancock Park and southwards to Wilshire Boulevard. This north-south pedestrian access across the site replaces Ogden Avenue, removing cars from the campus. Additional covered pedestrian walkways link through the site to tie together the disparate buildings. West of the entrance pavilion, a red outdoor escalator takes visitors directly to the top-floor entrance of the three-storey Broad Contemporary Art Museum. With its saw-tooth roof and unadorned travertine facade it is somewhat reminiscent of a factory building. BCAM’s collection is displayed in six generous galleries; large, 24 meter wide free-span spaces, with high ceilings and wooden floors. Flooded with natural light, the third-floor gallery has a glazed, louvered roof system. The middle level has no windows and is dedicated to special and temporary exhibitions. The ground level opens onto the park and the neighboring Resnick Pavilion.