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LACMA
This year LACMA engaged SPF:a to renovate the entire former May Company building - LACMA West - on Wilshire Blvd., directly adjacent Renzo Piano’s new annex. The project is a part of LACMA’s three-phase facility expansion and renovation.
The LACMA Transformation Project is seen as multi-phased approach with the goal of enhancing the visitor experience on every level. Phase I construction consisted of an underground parking garage, resulting in the expansion of Hancock Park, the addition of an orientation space, the BP Grand Entrance, and contemporary art galleries within Broad Comtemporary Art Museum (BCAM).
Phase II is scheduled to include the construction of a new Special Exhibitions Pavilion and the renovation of LACMA West. The nearly 70 year-old Streamline Moderne structure (1938), historically home for the May Company Department Store, holds the potential to facilitate growth crucial to the museum’s aims.
The rigid design of the 350,000 square foot building will provide a marked contrast for what should be an industrial intervention meant to house many different functions. The intervention will address infrastructure upgrades, programmatic area designs, circulation, and exterior upgrades. It is imperative the design be efficient, logical, cost effective, and planned for a 20-year life.
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Exhibition Gallery
Boone Children’s Gallery
Video labs
Prints and Drawings Study Center
Photography Study Center
Restaurant and Kitchen
Design store
Bookstore
Curatorial and Administration Offices
Special Event space
Board room
Art Storage
Carpenter/Paint workshop
Rifkind Center Library
Disney Gallery
Doris Stein Research Center |
16,000 sf
5,000 sf
1,000 sf
8,000 sf
8,000 sf
8,000 sf
1,000 sf
2,000 sf
30,000 sf
15,000 sf
10,000 sf
20,000 sf
5,000 sf
3,500 sf
2,000 sf
1,500 sf |
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Interiors will be loft-like in an open plan, taking advantage of the available natural light. Industrial/efficient building materials with durable finishes will be specified throughout.
Vertical circulation in the building will be improved either through escalator reactivation in some areas, or at the very least, with the creation of an open stair between floors that contain the majority of administrative offices. Finally, SPF:a will design an upgrade for the exterior of the building that preserves the historic elements while revitalizing areas that require attention.
“LACMA is delighted to have SPF:a join our team as we plan for the renovation of the LACMA West,” said Michael Govan, Director and CEO of LACMA. “We know their superior work and attention to the details of this important historic structure will guarantee that the final product will serve the myriad needs of the museum and its public.”
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