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George W. Bush Presidential Center, American Building, Project, News, USA, Design, Property
Key Development in United States of America
Project by Robert A. M. Stern Architects
George W. Bush Presidential Center
Architect: Robert A. M. Stern
Landscape Architect: Michael Van Valkenburgh
Location: Southern Methodist University (SMU), Dallas, Texas, USA
18 Nov
MRS. LAURA W. BUSH AND ARCHITECTS UNVEIL DESIGN OF
GEORGE W. BUSH PRESIDENTIAL CENTER
Ceremonial courtyard:

DALLASMrs. Laura W. Bush, Architect Robert A. M. Stern and Landscape
Architect Matthew Urbanski today unveiled the design of the George
W. Bush Presidential Center, a modern brick and limestone structure
that complements the American Georgian character of the SMU campus,
set within a low-maintenance, quintessentially Texas landscape. The
light-filled building is both presidential and welcoming, includes
elements that evoke both Texas and Washington, and will house the
three components of the George W. Bush Presidential Center: an Archive,
a Museum and a policy Institute.
North elevation ; Section - full ; South elevation ; Section - partial
I applaud the work of Robert Stern and Michael Van Valkenburgh
in designing a building and landscape that will capture the dignity
of the office of the Presidency, while at the same time being warm
and welcoming to visitors, President George W. Bush said. Laura
and I are thrilled with the plans.
The building and landscape evoke elements of the full span of
George and Laura Bushs life and service, from their ranch in
Crawford to the White House, and help us share the story of a couple
committed to public service based on the core principles of freedom,
opportunity, responsibility and compassion, said Mark Langdale,
President of the George W. Bush Foundation.
The George W. Bush Presidential Center reflects a unique design
that is appropriate in representing the first U.S. President of the
21st Century, said R. Gerald Turner, President of Southern Methodist
University. At the same time, it reflects major components of
SMUs Collegiate Georgian architectural tradition of nearly 100
years. As a modern expression of our heritage, this facility will
be a welcome addition to the stately buildings and grounds that make
the SMU campus a special place for learning, Turner said.
The building and landscape are designed to achieve LEED platinum certification
and include numerous sustainable design strategies, including locally
sourced building materials (several types of Texas limestone, stained
pecan interior paneling), 20 percent recycled materials, solar hot
water panels, native landscaping to reduce irrigation and a storm-water
management system that conveys, cleanses and collects surface runoff
and roof rainwater, and will provide 50 percent of the irrigation
needed for the site.
The building and landscape are integrated, with numerous links between
indoor and outdoor spaces. Visitors to the museum will enter the building
through Freedom Hall, a large, light-filled open space that will tie
the different aspects of the museum experience together. On one side
of Freedom Hall, visitors will be able to tour the Museums permanent
exhibit, which will include a replica of the Oval Office as it was
during President Bushs tenure, complete with an outdoor Texas
Rose Garden that
mimics the proportion and scale of the White House Rose Garden. The
Museum will tell the story of the presidency by examining key decisions
and the core principles that defined President Bushs service:
freedom, opportunity, responsibility and compassion.
The opposite side of Freedom Hall will house the temporary exhibit
space, a ceremonial courtyard and a café. The Institute portion
of the building will include a conference center with a 364-seat auditorium
with simultaneous translation and broadcast capabilities, along with
numerous offices for scholars and a presidential suite for receptions
and other functions. The Institute will have its own entrance on axis
with Binkley Avenue. The Archives will be the home for the official
documents and
artifacts of the Bush administration, where they will be presented
to the public for study and discussion.
The landscape will be an attraction in and of itself, with seasonable
displays in the wildflower meadow, large tree-shaded lawns for sitting,
picnicking or playing, numerous gardens and courtyards, tall grass
prairie with seasonal wildflowers, and savannah and woodland clearings
that provide a range of native habitat for butterflies, birds and
other wildlife species.
The landscape will function as an urban park that will engage a broad
range of users, including library and special event visitors, SMU
students, faculty and staff and the University Park community. It
provides numerous spaces for events and gatherings, including performances
in the outdoor amphitheater and intramural sports on the west lawn.
Freedom Plaza ; Freedom Hall ; Foyer ; West elevation

George W. Bush Presidential Center Design Team
Robert A.M. Stern Architects, LLP, is a 220-person firm of architects,
interior designers, and supporting staff. The firm is dedicated to
the idea that architecture must engage in a conversation across time,
connecting the present and future with the past. Robert A.M. Stern
Architects brings to the design of the George W. Bush Presidential
Center significant experience with the planning and design of museums
that present a contemporary architectural response to the legacy of
an important American cultural figure, including the Norman Rockwell
Museum at Stockbridge, Massachusetts; the Roger Tory Peterson Institute
in Jamestown, New York; and the Museum Center at the Mark Twain House
& Museum in Hartford, Connecticut. Stern, practicing architect, teacher,
and writer, is Dean of the Yale School of Architecture. He is a Fellow
of the American Institute of Architects, and received the Jacqueline
Kennedy Onassis Medal from the Municipal Art Society of New York in
2009 and the tenth Vincent Scully Prize from the National Building
Museum in 2008. In 2007 he received both the Athena Award from the
Congress for the New Urbanism and the Board of Directors' Honor from
the Institute of Classical Architecture and Classical America. Joining
Mr. Stern in the design effort were partners Augusta Barone, Alexander
P. Lamis, and Graham S. Wyatt, and project architect Jim Pearson.
Van Valkenburgh Associates, Inc., Landscape Architects (MVVA) is known
across North America and internationally for innovative landscapes
that address contemporary social and environmental issues while also
achieving, as with the George W. Bush Presidential Center, a timeless
style that appeals to a broad range of the American public. Founded
in 1982, MVVA has received numerous awards and previously worked with
First Lady Laura Bush on the redesign of Pennsylvania Avenue in front
of the White House. Michael Van Valkenburgh was the 2003 recipient
of the Smithsonian Institutions Cooper Hewitt National Design
Award for Environmental Design and is a 1988 winner of the prestigious
American Academy in Rome Prize. He has taught both full and part time
at Harvards Graduate School of Design since 1982. The key senior
staff members working on the Library with Michael are firm Principals,
Laura Solano and Matthew Urbanski, and Herb Sweeney, Associate and
Project Manager.
Mrs. Laura W. Bush chaired the design committee for the Bush Presidential
Center. Members of the committee included: Roland Betts, Founder and
Chairman of Chelsea Piers, L.P.; The Honorable Mark Langdale, President,
George W. Bush Foundation; Deedie Rose, Philanthropist; Witold Rybczynski,
Martin & Margy Meyerson Professor of Urbanism and Professor of
Real Estate, University of Pennsylvania; Sidney J. Sanders, Vice President,
Facilities and Construction, The Methodist Hospital System; and R.
Gerald Turner, President, Southern Methodist University.
The Presidential Center will be located at Southern Methodist University,
five miles north of downtown Dallas. It will occupy a 23.11-acre site
on the main campus, near the corner of SMU Boulevard and North Central
Expressway (U.S. Highway 75). The site is near a light rail station.
View southwest ; View southeast

Previously:
Former President George W. Bush and Mrs. Laura W. Bush announced November
12 that "education, global health, human freedom and economic
growth will be the major initial areas of focus" for the George
W. Bush Institute during speeches at SMU.
Mr. and Mrs. Bush continue with plans for the George W. Bush Presidential
Center at SMU and periodically visit the University to take part
in events and to meet with students, faculty and administrators.
Address: Southern Methodist University
PO Box 750174
Dallas, TX 75275-0174, USA
DALLAS-Mrs. Laura W. Bush, Architect Robert A. M. Stern and Landscape
Architect Michael Van Valkenburgh will unveil the design of the George
W. Bush Presidential Center on November 18, at the Collins Executive
Education Center at Southern Methodist University.
Southern Methodist
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