Tadao Ando designs Wrightwood 659 exhibition space in Chicago
Japanese architect Tadao Ando has turned an old brick building in Chicago into an architecture-focused exhibition centre.
Located within a four-storey building, completed in 1929 in the city's Lincoln Park neighbourhood, Wrightwood 659 is dedicated to exhibitions of architecture and socially engaged art.
The former apartment building provides a shell for the 35,565-square-foot (3,304-square-metre) centre, which Ando transformed using more brickwork along with concrete surfaces.
A new atrium spanning the full height of the building is filled with natural light from a series of rectangular windows. The building's brick construction was made visible by stripping out the insulation.
"The entire interior of the apartment building was removed, and a new steel and reinforced-concrete structure was erected within the perimeter masonry shell," said a project description.
A concrete staircase that wraps around a pillar of the same material was added by Ando, and provides the primary circulation up the atrium.
Glass railings reflect light from the nearby windows, while wooden boards the ceiling soften the otherwise cold materiality.
Ando also added a rooftop structure, a terrace facing north and a vista of Chicago's skyline to the south.
The inaugural exhibition, Ando and Le Corbusier: Masters of Architecture, explores the Swiss-French modernist architect's influence on his Japanese contemporary.
Many of the floors include galleries with architectural models made by stu...
-------------------------------- |
Watch our talk about circular architecture live from Dutch Design Week 2019 |
|
Architect?s midcentury Texas home is striking and creative inside and out
05-05-2024 08:02 - (
Interior Design )
Enchanting mountain retreat in the beauty of the North Carolina Mountains
05-05-2024 08:02 - (
Interior Design )