|
|
British Museum, London, Building, Picture, Architect, Location, Date,
Design
British Museum London : Architecture + Images
Famous Structure by Robert Smirke in London, England
British Museum
1823-47
Sir Robert Smirke

photo © Nick Weall
British Museum Great Court
1994-2000
Foster & Partners
British Museum Conservation + Exhibition Spaces
2007-11
Rogers Stirk Harbour & Partners
Location: Bloomsbury, north central London
The Museum has a rich architectural heritage, the site has developed
and grown at each stage of its history.

aerial photo © the Trustees of the British
Museum
British Museum Great Court
Foster & Partners
The courtyard at the centre of the British Museum was one of Londons
long-lost spaces. Originally an open garden, soon after its completion
in the mid-nineteenth century it was filled by the round Reading Room
and its associated bookstacks. Without this space the Museum was like
a city without a park. This project is about its reinvention.
In terms of visitor numbers over five million annually - the British
Museum is as popular as the Louvre in Paris or the Metropolitan Museum
of Art in New York. In the absence of a centralised circulation system
this popularity caused a critical level of congestion throughout the
building and created a frustrating experience for the visitor. The
departure of the British Library to St Pancras provided the opportunity
to clear away the bookstacks and to recapture the courtyard to give
the building a new public focus. The Great Court is entered from the
Museums principal level, and connects all the surrounding galleries.
Within the space - the largest enclosed public space in Europe - there
are information points, a bookshop and a caf. At its heart is the
magnificent space of the restored Reading Room, now an information
centre and library of world cultures, which for the first time in
its history is open to all. Broad staircases encircle the Reading
Room and lead to a gallery for temporary exhibitions with a restaurant
above. Below the level of the Court are the new Sainsbury African
Galleries, an education centre, and facilities for schoolchildren.
The glazed canopy that makes all this possible is a fusion of state-of-the-art
engineering and economy of form. Its unique geometry is designed to
span the irregular gap between the drum of the Reading Room and the
courtyard facades, and forms both the primary structure and the framing
for the glazing, which is designed to maximise daylight and reduce
solar gain. As a cultural square, the Court also resonates beyond
the confines of the Museum, forming a new link in the pedestrian route
from the British Library to Covent Garden and the river. To complement
this civic artery, the Museums forecourt has been freed from cars
and restored to form a new public space. Like the Great Court it is
open to the public from first thing in the morning to early evening,
creating a major amenity for London.
British Museum Great Court - Building Information
Client: Trustees of the British Museum
Consultants: Buro Happold, Northcroft Nicholson, Buro Happold, Claude
Engle Lighting Consultant, Emmer Pfeninger, FEDRA, Giles Quarme Associates
/ Caroe and Partners / Ian Bristow, MACE Ltd, Mark Johnson Associates,
Sandy Brown Associates
British Museum Great Court information from Foster & Partners
Richard Rogers
London Architect Offices
British
Museum Building Extension

image © the Trustees of the British Museum
British Museum Building Extension
British Museum Building Extension
Special Exhibitions Centre
The Museum has built an enviable reputation in recent years for once
in a lifetime exhibitions such as The First Emperor: Chinas
Terracotta Army and Hadrian: Empire and Conflict as well as smaller,
thought-provoking shows highlighting contemporary middle-eastern art,
Japanese crafts and American print-making. The Museum has been able
to use the Reading Room as a temporary exhibition venue to house some
of these exhibitions but is in urgent need of a flexible purpose-built
exhibition space to accommodate more visitors to ensure a comfortable
and engaging experience. The North West Development includes a temporary
exhibition space of over 1,000 sqm which will allow the Museum to
cement its status as a leader in curating, designing and displaying
special exhibitions.
Science and Conservation Laboratories
The British Museum has the largest conservation and science department
in the country, covering an extensive range of materials, both ancient
and modern, from the Museums huge and varied collection. The
department is internationally recognised for its ground-breaking work,
creating new knowledge and new techniques that are shared with museums
thought the UK and the world. Current facilities are in need of updating
and the state of the art laboratories, studios and library facilities
in the development will ensure the Museum can continue to care for
and research its collection. It will also allow for an expansion of
the Museums highly regarded conservation training programme.
Logistics and Collection handling
The British Museum is committed to lending objects from the collection
within the UK and across the world. The Museum lends more of its collection
than any other museum or gallery, 4,000 objects to 150 institutions
in 2008. A dedicated area for the preparation of loan material will
ensure the safety of the thousands of objects brought into, and sent
out of the Museum every year. Secure loading bays will provide direct
access to the new special exhibition space, conservation and science
facilities and the rest of the Museum.
Study collection storage
The world collection of the British Museum includes upwards of seven
million artefacts. The majority of these objects comprise the study
collection, objects which are not on permanent display for conservation
reasons or because they are primarily an academic resource. On-site
facilities to house the study collections will provide improved access
for students, academics and the public, as well as modern, environmentally
controlled systems able to maintain the stable conditions necessary
for the preservation of objects.
|
Tate Modern
British Museum architect :
Robert Smirke
Museum Buildings
London Architect
London Museum Buildings

World Architecture : e-architect
- key buildings across the globe
Comments / photos for the British Museum Development London Architecture
page welcome: info@e-architect.co.uk
British Museum Development Building : page
- adrian welch / isabelle lomholt |
|
|
|