The Glass Pavilion, a new 70,000 sf building at the Toledo Museum of Art
designed by the internationally renowned firm SANAA and in conjunction with
Kendall/Heaton Associates, was completed in August of 2006. The pavilion
houses the museum’s vast collection of glass artworks and serves as a tribute
to the art of glass making itself. Amorphous and undulating interior walls
of glass within a glass box mimic the fluidity and translucence of the material.
With hardly a line of detraction, a flat roof sits atop the glass walls of
a single floor at grade level. The simplicity and purity of the design posed
a great challenge to properly accommodate the mechanical systems and equipment
without jeopardizing the inherent translucency of the overall design. The
lightness of the roof and structure necessitated all mechanical systems to
be buried in a basement below, located in a nearby building, or hidden in
carefully designed structural elements. The building sits on a pleasantly
wooded area of the museum campus and includes two more opaque galleries for
more light sensitive works. These solid white forms also serve to anchor
the structure visually.
Stuart-Lynn Company worked as cost estimators on this project.
Size: 70,000 sf
Completion: 2005
Architect:
SANAA
Kendall/Heaton Associates
Engineer:
Cosentini Associates