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6 Nov 2008:
KYU SUNG WOO ARCHITECTS WIN AIA CENTRAL STATES HONOR AWARD
Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art at Johnson County Community College
Awarded Highest Achievement
OVERLAND PARK, KS Kyu Sung Woo Architects, the internationally renowned
architectural practice headquartered in Cambridge, Mass., has received
the Honor Award at the AIA Central States Design Excellence Awards for
their design of the Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art (Overland Park,
KS). The Honor Award, which is given to select projects that are deemed
exemplary in detail, context and execution, is the highest recognition
bestowed by the AIA Central States. The 2008 jury panel included: Julie
Lasky, Editor in Chief, ID Magazine (New York); Julie Snow, FAIA, Julie
Snow Architects (Minneapolis); and Jane Weinzapfel, FAIA, Leers Weinzapfel
Associate Architects (Boston.)
"This is Architecture," declared Jane Weinzapfel, Principal
of Boston's Leers Weinzapfel Associates.
The museum, home to a significant collection of contemporary artists including:
Dana Schutz, Kehinde Wiley, Uta Barth, Kerry James Marshall and Do-Ho
Suh, has brought an exciting new presence to the campus of Johnson County
Community College and serves as the starting point of a campus-wide art
installation program.
KYU SUNG WOO ARCHITECTS DESIGNS NEW ART MUSEUM
Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art at Johnson County Community College
images copyright Timothy Hursley, The Arkansas Office

images received 180108 & 310108
OVERLAND PARK, KS Kyu Sung Woo Architects, an international architectural
practice headquartered in Cambridge, Mass. has designed the new Nerman
Museum of Contemporary Art in Overland Park, KS. The museum, home to a
significant collection of contemporary artists including: Dana Schutz,
Kehinde Wiley, Uta Barth, Kerry James Marshall and Do-Ho Suh, will bring
an exciting new presence to the campus of Johnson County Community College
and will serve as the starting point of a campus-wide art installation
program.

It was a wonderful opportunity to develop this museum in the suburban
Midwest, says Kyu Sung Woo, Principal. This community college
has an exceptional collection of outdoor sculpture and other contemporary
art located throughout its campus that creates a daily experience of art
for its students. This inspired the direction for the building as we began
to think of the museum not as a repository for art, but as the start of
a longer journey of art on campus.

Kyu Sung Woos contemporary, minimalist building makes a strong statement.
This limestone clad and glass enclosed modern structure signals a new
entrance to the campus and connects the school to the community. The museum
entrance faces outward towards the main streets and a 1.5 acre front lawn
leading to the campus, an impressive site for future acquisitions. A dramatic
22-foot cantilever of the main gallery space above the entrance is enhanced
by an exterior installation by artist Leo Villareal. His stunning LED
display extends the lantern-like effect of the glass façade and
supports the connection to the landscape established by the building.

The glass-enclosed lobby runs along one side of the museum front, providing
a broad view of its interior from afar and giving a constant sense of
activity within. Retaining walls, extending into the landscape, further
define the exterior garden, enforce the connection of building to land,
and help form the visitors path. The exterior treatment reflects
local materials and context; the selection of limestone for the cladding
was in part inspired when excavation revealed this to be the naturally
occurring subsurface rock on the site.

The interior provides flexible exhibition space for permanent and temporary
shows, as well as educational and social spaces that further connect the
museum to campus activity. In the Museum, art and architecture are experienced
together as a part of daily life. Daylight is drawn into the building
along its perimeter with clerestory skylights that bring light down to
wash the walls, creating an association with the outside, a sense of openness
and a connection to the passing of time as the quality of light shifts.
A double-height atrium wrapped with perforated metal to filter and soften
light joins the museum to an adjacent technology center and integrates
the museum into campus life.

The museum establishes a new identity for this 234 acre suburban Kansas
City campus. Located within the traditional Midwestern mile-square grid,
Johnson County Community College is home to a renowned and notable collection
of contemporary art that students encounter throughout their day-to-day
lives, from walking to class to taking meals at the dining halls. Rather
than compete with the large campus, Kyu Sung Woo found the opportunity
for this new building to become a catalyst for a new experience of the
site: the start of an art-walk and the entryway to a journey of art on
campus.

The buildings programming includes:
· 11,000 square feet of exhibition space
· 5,400 square feet of academic spaces
· 200 seat auditorium
· 2,400 square foot café
· 3,000 square foot atrium connecting the museum to an adjacent
technology center
· 3,700 square feet of art storage

The architect of record on the project is Gould Evans Associates.

Kyu Sung Woo Architects
Kyu Sung Woo Architects creates memorable spaces reflecting the emotional
and functional needs of the people who will use them. From university
housing to urban complexes, the firm designs buildings and environments
that restore the meaning that architecture can bring to the individuals
daily life. Current work includes the Asian Cultural Complex, a 1.4 million
square feet urban scale project in Gwangju, Korea. Founding Principal
Kyu Sung Woo brings to each project his commitment to understanding deeply
what the program does and will mean to its many stakeholders.

Johnson County Community College
When the Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art opens on the campus of Johnson
County Community College in October 2007, it will be the largest contemporary
art museum in a four-state region and the only contemporary art museum
in Kansas. Since 1983, JCCC, Overland Park, Kan., has been collecting
contemporary art from around the globe. Today, the work of more than 600
local, regional, national and international artists is represented in
JCCCs prestigious collection, which features a diverse range of
painting, photography, clay, sculpture and works on paper. In April 2006,
Public Art Review magazine named JCCC as one of the top 10 university/college
campuses for public art in America, citing the outdoor sculpture and the
hundreds of paintings, ceramics, photography and works on paper installed
throughout the campus. JCCC, long considered one of the best community
colleges in the country, is Kansas third largest institution of
higher education and the largest of its 19 community colleges.

Nerman Museum of Contemporary
Art : Kansas Building
Boston Buildings
World Architecture : e-architect
- a guide to key buildings across the globe
Modern
American house : Zimmerman House
Kyu Sung Woo
Architects
American Architecture
American Architects
Comments / photos for the Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art Building
page welcome: info@e-architect.co.uk
Nerman Museum of Contemporary
Art : page - adrian welch / isabelle lomholt
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