Yalin Mimarlik completes Museum of Troy in Turkey
Yalin Mimarlik has completed a weathering-steel-clad archaeological museum in northwest Turkey, which is dedicated to the history of the city of Troy.
Located 800 metres from the site of the ancient city, the orange-coloured museum was designed by Turkish architecture studio Yalin Mimarlik to resemble an "excavated artefact".
It takes the form of a cube clad in weathering steel called Corten, which extends down below the ground into a vast subterranean level.
First excavated in 1870, Troy is an ancient city famous for the mythical siege narrated in Homer's Iliad. Excavations from the site reveal the earliest contact made between the civilisations of Asia and the Mediterranean.
"Museum of Troy is honouring this heritage and is a medium to tell the rich history of Troy in relation to its natural, cultural, artistic and archeological context," explained the architects.
Yalin Mimarlik won a competition held by Turkey's Ministry of Culture and Tourism to design a museum at the UNESCO World Heritage site in 2011.
Now complete, it comprises 2,000 square metres of exhibition space, split over four floors, showcasing ancient artefacts.
The Museum of Troy's entrance is on the subterranean floor, where a large ramp lined with concrete walls indented with niches to hold small exhibits.
As well as the entrance hall, this underground floor houses exhibition spaces, a cafe, restaurant, retail facilities, and hidden conservation laboratories and storage spac...
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