Astrup Fearnley Museum of Modern Art, Oslo

Architect: Renzo Piano Building Workshop

Year: 2012

Location: Oslo, Norway

Category: Cultural / Museum

Status: Built

Astrup Fearnley Museum of Modern Art, Oslo

About

Tjuvholmen is a new cultural quarter located to the south-west of Oslo’s city center. Integrating art and leisure, the complex combines the Astrup Fearnley Museum and an office building with a new public sculpture park, swimming beach and waterside promenade. As a continuation of the redevelopment of the Aker Brygge area, site of former shipyards, Tjuvholmen has a privileged location right on the water’s edge, with views over the fjord and the city. The program required a new home for the permanent collection of the Astrup Fearnley Museum, a separate space for its temporary exhibitions, and an office building with its own exhibition area for a private art collection. Three timber-clad buildings sheltered under a single swooping glass roof in a newly landscaped public sculpture garden. A tour of the museum takes the visitor on a journey through ten rooms and all three buildings, starting with the permanent collection on the north side of the canal that cuts through the middle of the site, connecting at ground level underneath the main stair and piazza with the office building and its private art collection. To the south, over a footbridge across the canal, is the museum’s space for temporary exhibitions. Gallery space is spread over two floors, giving the visitor a diverse range of spaces and volumes to experience, shaped by the curve of the sloping roof and lit via a spectacular skylight. An exterior roof terrace at second floor level provides a generous exhibition space for sculptures. The four-storey office building is arranged around a central, day-lit atrium. Conference rooms and terraces on the upper floors take advantage of the spectacular views.

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