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MoMA Extension New York, New Tower, Architect, Image, Design, Project, News
MoMA New York : Architecture Information + Images
Ateliers Jean Nouvel Building, Manhattan, USA for Hines
MoMA Extension + Hotel + Apartments - Tower
2007-
Jean Nouvel
adj. Existing MoMA building
75 storeys
MoMA New York Tower cut down by 200 feet
News Update, 15 Sep 2009
NY City Planning Departments decision on Wednesday 9 Sep 2009
to chop off 200 feet from the top of a proposed tower. Amanda Burden,
the city planning commissioner, said the towers top, which culminates
in three uneven peaks, did not meet the aesthetic standards of a building
that would compete in height with the citys most famous towers.
The New York Times reported that Ms. Burdens objections were
directed at the top of the building. Members of the commission
had to make a decision based on what was in front of them, she
said. The development team had to show us that they were creating
something as great or even greater than the Empire State Building
and the design they showed us was unresolved.
The loss of as much as 150,000 square feet of floor space could lead
to cuts in the design budget or a move to pack more space onto the
lower floors, which could further distort the buildings proportions.

MoMA Tower images © Ateliers Jean Nouvel
JEAN NOUVEL DESIGN UNVEILED FOR HINES PROJECT IN MANHATTAN
(NEW YORK) Hines, the international real estate firm, announced
today the formal selection of Paris-based architect Jean Nouvel as
the designer of a new building slated for a key parcel in midtown
Manhattan, adjacent to The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA). The preliminary
architectural design was also released.
Nouvels bold design will rise 75 stories from the 17,000-square-foot-site
between 53rd and 54th streets just west of MoMA. Currently, a mix
of uses is contemplated for the building including: a 50,000-square-foot
expansion of MoMAs galleries (levels two to five); a 100-room,
seven-star hotel and 120 highest-end residential condominiums on the
upper floors. The project will likely commence pre-sales in late 2008.

Nouvels design maximizes the site while considering the citys
zoning envelope. The proposed buildings unique silhouette tapers
as it rises to a distinctive spire. Its steel and glass façade
reveals the diagrid structural design.
Gerald D. Hines, chairman of Hines, commented, Nouvels
exciting concept has the potential to become an international architectural
design icon.
The Hines firm has collaborated with Nouvel on both 40 Mercer in New
Yorks SoHo neighborhood and on the C1 Tower currently under
development in Paris.

Jean Nouvel has headed his own architectural practice, Ateliers Jean
Nouvel, since 1970. His honors include the Gold Medal of the French
Academy of Architecture, the Royal Gold Medal of the Royal Institute
of British Architects, the Aga Khan Prize, honorary fellowships from
the American Institute of Architecture, and Frances National
Grand Prize for Architecture. He was awarded Italys Borromini
Prize and Japans Praemium Imperial Career Prize as well as the
Wolf Prize, the Arnold W. Brunner Memorial Prize in architecture,
and the International Highrise Award.
Among Mr. Nouvels completed buildings are the Arab World Institute,
Paris; Lyon Opera House; Cartier Foundation, Paris; Galeries Lafayette
department store, Berlin; Lucerne Culture and Congress Center; Tours
Conference Center; The Hotel in Lucerne; Andel office building, Prague;
Nantes Justice Center; Dentsu Tower, Tokyo; museum of archaeology,
Périgueux; the technology center in Wismar; Agbar office tower,
Barcelona; extension to the Queen Sofia museum, Madrid; Quai Branly
Museum, Paris; Guthrie Theater, Minneapolis; Brembos research
and development centre; and the Richemont Corporation headquarters
in Geneva.
Hines has been active in New York City since 1981, having developed
six major buildings in midtown, including Philip Johnsons Lipstick
Building at 885 Third Avenue. In addition to the recently completed
40 Mercer, Hines has three other residential projects underway in
New York City including One Jackson Square in Greenwich Village. Hines
also acquired three major office buildings in New York since 2003,
including I.M. Peis 499 Park, and currently manages more than
11.5 million square feet of office space in the area. For more information
on Hines, please visit www.hines.com. For information on this new
project, please visit www.53W53.com.
Tower Verre : MoMA Extension Info from Ateliers Jean Nouvel
Midtown Manhattan is an urban icon.
The history of zoning laws that have been shaping it for a century
command respect and attention.
The City’s rules of vertical growth have created more than just a
display of wealth or a new architectural style.
They materialize Manhattan’s power and life energy, and make it the
substance of the City’s monumental scale.
Building a tower in Midtown Manhattan starts with a dialogue between
decision makers.
Ultimately, this dialogue will have to answer two questions of substance.
What ideas is this tower made of and what is its place in the City?
With his design for the Tower Verre, Jean Nouvel proposes to take
the strict respect of the zoning envelope to the point where its shape
becomes the tower itself.
Governed by its legal envelope and the steel framing needed to withstand
the wind loads, this structure is as unique and singular as the parcel
it stands on. From close up, its receding stealth geometry makes it
surprisingly discrete and unobtrusive for its height.
Seen from Central Park, the bridges and most locations on the river
banks, its triangular silhouette stands out and is very recognizable
in the Manhattan skyline, inscribing the MoMA unmistakably as one
of New York’s most famous and successful cultural institutions.
The façades of the tower are a structural glazing in standard glass
dimensions and the bracing structure follows the simplest and most
economical geometry. Living inside this building feels like inhabiting
a power fully present and reassuring structure, similar to that of
a large tree.
The tower draws its shape from the desire for more daylight in the
streets and the same daylight feeds its solar panels with energy.
Its character is the structural expression of the wind bracing and
the same wind moves its Aeolian turbines.
The solar panels and wind turbines fill the narrow triangular top
section, putting its unusually thin silhouette to a reasonable use.
This tower is a monument to the rules of shadow and light, and to
the forces of the wind.
MoMA Tower Manhattan - Info from Ateliers Jean Nouvel in 2007
MoMA Tower Alternative, New
York : Axis Mundi
MoMA New York- Museum of Modern
Art

MoMA New York photo : Andrew McRae, 2007
New York Skyscrapers

image © Jock Pottle, Esto for Cook+Fox Architects
MoMA Exhibition
Museum of Contemporary Art New
York - Extension

MoMA New York architect
: Yoshio Taniguchi
Whitney Museum New York
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OMA

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