1、 动像博物馆 museum of moving image 发布时间:-1-23 核心词:建筑 公共 博物馆 美国 纽约 白色 数字 Leeser Architecture 非常感谢设计方Leeser Architecture 将英文简介和项目图片授权gooood发行。 Appreciation towards Leeser Architecture for providing the following description: A complete redesign of the ground floor of Museum of
2、the Moving Image, plus construction of a three-story addition and Courtyard Garden, will double the size of the existing building, enable growth and innovation in the Museum’s uniquely comprehensive presenation of screen culture in all its forms (film, television, and digital media) and welcome visi
3、tors into an experience in which architecture is seamlessly fused with the moving image. Major new program spaces include a 264-seat theater, 68-seat screen room, Video Screening Amphitheater, gallery for changing exhibitions, Education Center, on-site collection storage,café, museum store and Court
4、yard Garden. LOCATION 35 Avenue at 37 Street Astoria, New York MUSEUM LEADERSHIP Rochelle Solvin, Director Herbert S. Schlosser, Chairman of the Board of Trustees ARCHITECT Thomas Leeser, Leeser Architecture MUSEUM LEADERSHIP Rochelle Solvin, Director Herbert S. Schlosser, Cha
5、irman of the Board of Trustees KEY DATES Groundbreaking: February 27, Public Opening: January 15, SIZE Current Museum Building: 50,000sq ft Total New Contruction: 47,700sq ft Indoor 37,300sq ft TOTAL CAPITAL CAMPAIGN $67 million 位于纽约旳一种改建项目,将项目从花园到地下室通通改建一番,并增长与原有博物馆相似旳面积。提供独特旳文化
6、面貌(电影,电视,数字媒体),并将其融合在建筑中,迎接每一位客人。新方案涉及:264座旳剧院,68座旳放映室,画廊,教育中心,可变化旳展示空间,仓储空间,咖啡馆,商店以及博物馆庭院花园。ﻫ设计亮点诸多,全投影技术与室内空间交融一体,大堂泛着凉爽旳蓝光,倾斜旳天花板形成了自然旳聚会空间。264座旳剧院非常科技化,墙面和天花由1136块三角板构成编织旳纹样,配上活力旳蓝光,动感十足。高清屏幕,舞台还可举办其他活动,也有空间放置配乐乐团演奏空间。小型展览区使用了最新科技,并提供互动。画廊旳目旳是用数字装置展示各类展览材料。三楼重要是研究人员空间。教育中心在地下,也占了三楼旳部分,每年接待学校团队约6
7、000名学生,还里一种小吃店。68座旳放映厅一点也不逊色于大剧院,入口旳红色和内部旳灰色穿孔吸声墙面形成鲜明对比。这里体现密切旳尺度。室外庭院是学校团队入口,在夏天可以成为露天咖啡区和临时电影放映区。博物馆后侧旳外立面是由1067块薄铝合金开放式构成旳超轻前卫表皮。更多内容请看英文简介。 More:Leeser Architecture Peter Aaron/Esto. Courtesy of Museum of the Moving Image. DESIGN HIGHLIGHTS A relocated and redesigned entranc
8、e on 35 Avenue now presents visitors with a portal of mirrored and transparent glass with the words “Museum of the Moving Image” in letters three and a half feet tall. With its teasing play of light—merging direct vision and reflection within a single plane—the entrance is itself the first screen th
9、at visitors encounter at the Museum. As visitors move into the new lobby, across a polyester floor in a cool light blue, they pass along a 50-foot-long wall coated with screen paint, used as the surface for a seamless panorama of projected video, with works selected on a changing basis by the curat
10、orial team. Lending a sense of dynamism to the visitor’s progression through the lobby, the projection wall is canted at an 83-degree angle. Toward the far end of the lobby, a new café is located opposite a gathering space carved out beneath a sloping ceiling, whose angle follows the underside of th
11、e main theater. Visitors may turn to the right from the lobby and step up through either of two tunnels in Yves Klein blue into the new 264-seat theater: a space designed as a capsule for the imaginary voyage of moviegoing. The ceiling and walls are a woven felt surface of sensuous, vibrant Yves Kl
12、ein blue, which slips under the stadium-rake seating to give the audience a sensation of floating. This wraparound surface is made of 1,136 triangular panels, fitted together with open joints with the lighting integrated within. Outfitted with an ample screen of classic proportions and projection eq
13、uipment for formats from 16mm to 70mm and highdefinition digital 3-D, the theater will provide an unsurpassed filmgoing experience. A stage accommodates the Museum’s ongoing series of discussions and other live events, while a miniorchestra pit provides space for musical accompaniment of silent film
14、s. On the left side of the lobby, across from the entrance to the theater, stands the grand staircase.At the first landing, the staircase widens into a 1,700-square-foot Video Screening Amphitheater.The seats are an abstract landscape of built-in benches, while the wall above the staircase s
15、erves as the screen for changing exhibitions of moving-image works. Passing up the staircase to the second floor, visitors will find a small exhibition gallery, a secondary entrance to the main theater and an entrance to one of the two floors of the 15,000-square-foot core exhibition Behind the Scre
16、en, which has been completely refurbished with new monitors, computers, interactive software and lighting. At the top of the grand staircase, the new gallery for changing exhibitions on the third floor provides the Museum with its first completely flexible space for presenting cutting-edge new proje
17、cts. With 4,100 square feet of unencumbered space, the gallery is designed to allow the Museum to present exhibition materials of every variety, from screen-culture artifacts to digital media installations. The new on-site space for collection storage, located on the third floor, serves an internati
18、onal community of researchers and scholars, offering unprecedented access to much of the Museum’s unparalleled collection of more than 130,000 objects. The new Ann and Andrew Tisch Education Center occupies the entire west side of the ground floor in both the addition and the existing building, as w
19、ell as spaces on the third floor and the lower level. Enabling the Museum to accommodate twice as many school groups as in the past, to serve 60,000 students a year, the Education Center provides a dedicated group entry, the William Fox Amphitheater for student orientation, a flexible Digital Learni
20、ng Suite with specially designed mobile computer workstations (divisible into two discrete media labs, or able to function as an open auditorium for up to 100 students), and the Nam June Paik Experimental Production Studio where students can record their own high-tech video works, finish them in a p
21、ostproduction bay and distribute them to a world-wide audience via the Internet. A lunchroom will accommodate school groups that require this facility and previously could not benefit from tours of the Museum. Incorporated into the Education Center, but regularly used for public programs, is the new
22、 68- seat film and digital Celeste and Armand Bartos Screening Room. Equal in excellence to the 264-seat main theater but presenting a striking design contrast, this secondary screening room has a hot pink entrance and features exposed loudspeakers and a grey, perforated acoustical wall surface, mak
23、ing it more of an exposed machine for the moving image. The space is ideal for more intimate screenings and presentations, as well as classroom and symposium use. The new, 10,370-square-foot landscaped Courtyard Garden incorporates the dedicated entrance for school groups. During summer months, it w
24、ill provide space for an outdoor café, and a large temporary screen may be installed for open-air movie showings. The new rear façade of the Museum is comprised of a surfacepattern of triangles like those in the main theater, but made in this case out of 1,067 thin aluminum panels, which are
25、 mounted on the support structure with open joints, so that every joint is a rain grate. Light blue in color, the panels look razorsharp but create the impression of a super-light floating skin dematerialized against the sky: another visual reference in the architecture to the infinite thinness of t
26、he moving image. In their pattern, the panels also bring to mind the lines of wireframe computer drawings. Because the triangular panels must fit together precisely to form the skin, the entirerear façade, which is approximately 200 feet long, is built to a tolerance of 3/16 of an inch. GREE
27、N DESIGN The project is being designed to achieve Silver LEED certification. ARCHITECTURAL TEAM Leeser Architecture, New York Founder and Principal: Thomas Leeser Project Manager: David Linehan Design Team: Simon Arnold, Kate Burke, Sofia Castricone, Henry Grosman, Joseph Haberl CONSULTA
28、NTS Owner’s Representative: Levien & Company, Inc. Construction Manager: F.J. Sciame Construction Co., Inc. Audio/Visual: Scharff/Weisberg Acoustician: Jaffe Holden Acoustics, Inc. Lighting: L’Observatoire International Graphics: karlssonwilker inc. Exterior Wall: R. A. Heintges & Associates
29、 MEP Engineers: Ambrosino, DePinto & Schmieder Specification: Construction Specifications Inc. Structural Engineers: Anastos Engineering Associates Civil/Geo-Technical: Stantec Code/Expediting: JAM Consultants, Inc. Elevator: Van Deusen & Associates Hazardous Materials: TRC Environmental Corpo
30、ration Projection Systems: MDC Group, LLC Restaurant Program: JGL Foodservice Design Security: Ducibella Venter & Santore Sustainable Design: Atelier Ten Telephone & Data: Shen Milsom Wilke Textile Design: Cindy Sirko Courtyard: David Dew Bruner AV Contractor: Electrosonic Inc. Security Contractor: Tritech Communications Rendering: VUW More:Leeser Architecture Peter Aaron/Esto. Courtesy of Museum of the Moving Image. 。






