|
|
Wing Luke Asian Museum, Architect, Image, Building, Architecture, News, Photo
Wing Luke Asian Art Museum, USA
Key American Development in Seattle, Washington State
14 Oct 2008
Wing Luke Asian Museum
Olson Sundberg Kundig Allen Architects
Photos : Lara Swimmer

WING LUKE ASIAN MUSEUM WINS TWO DESIGN AWARDS
26 Mar 2009
Wing Luke Asian Museum, designed by Rick Sundberg, FAIA LEED AP of
Olson Sundberg Kundig Allen Architects has received awards in two
major national design competitions: a Great Places Award given by
the Environmental Design Research Association (EDRA), Places: Forum
of Design for the Public Realm, and Metropolis magazine; and the International
Interior Design Associations (IIDA) prestigious 36th Annual Interior
Design Competition.
The 2009 Great Places Awards honored seven exemplary projects in architecture,
planning, landscape architecture, and urban design. Wing Luke Asian
Museum received a Place Design award, for a built project that demonstrates
excellence as a human environment. The jury praised the skill with
which the restoration was completed, especially the way much of the
buildings patina was retained. The insertion of new program elements
on lower floors and structural members throughout was also well and
carefully attended to. The result today is a sensitive setting for
the evocation of the immigrant experience and the continued vitality
of Asian-American communities in the city.
The other Great Places Award winners were Snohetta AS for The Norwegian
National Opera, Oslo, Norway (Place Design); the University of Texas,
Dallas Urban Laboratory for Vision 2030: West Dallas Gateway, Strategic
Framework Initiative (Planning Award); CJ Lim, Studio 8 Architects
for Guangming Sustainable Park, Shenzen, China (Planning Award); Takako
Tajima for Resuscitating the Fez River: Procedures to Create New Public
Space in the Medina of Fez (Planning Award); University of Minnesota,
and Ann Forsyth for Design for Health (Research Award) and Daring
to Look: Dorothea Langs Photographs and Reports from the Field, by
Anne Spirn; published in 2008 by the University of Chicago Press (Book
Award).
Awards will be presented in May at EDRAs 40th annual meeting, in Kansas
City, Missouri. Winning projects and commentary will be published
in the Fall 2009 issue of Places. The jurors were: David Lake, Principal,
Lake/Flato Architects, San Antonio, Texas, Elizabeth Macdonald, Professor
of City and Regional Planning and Urban Design, University of California,
Berkeley, Rahul Mehrotra, Professor of Architecture, Massachusetts
Institute of Technology; Principal, Rahul Mehrotra Associates, Mumbai,
India, Lawrence Speck, Professor of Architecture, University of Texas,
Austin; Principal, PageSoutherlandPage, Austin, Texas, William Sullivan,
Professor of Landscape Architecture, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.
Olson Sundberg Kundig Allen Architects design for the Wing Luke Asian
Museum is one of six winning projects in the International Interior
Design Associations (IIDA) prestigious 36th Annual Interior Design
Competition.
The six winners in the 36th Annual Interior Design Competition were
chosen from nearly four hundred projects submitted in the following
practice areas: Commercial, Education/Institutional, Government, Healthcare,
Hospitality, Residential and Retail.
In addition to the Wing Luke Asian Museum, the other winners were:
Greenhouse Nightclub New York, NY (Bluarch Architecture + Interiors),
Nishimura Restaurant, Shangri-La Hotel Beijing, CHINA (CL3 Architects
Limited); Museum of Tolerance Los Angeles, CA (Cannon Design); Fornari
Headquarters Milan, ITALY (Giorgio Borruso Design); Cathedral of Christ
the Light (Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP). Gallery More North
in New York, a gallery/exhibition space devoted to the best of contemporary
Nordic art and design, designed by KOKO Architecture + Design was
chosen as the winner of the 17th Annual Will Ching Design Competition,
which honors outstanding commercial design by firms of five or fewer
individuals.
"We were pleased to see so many entries this year from which
our distinguished panel of judges selected a globally diverse group
of winners representing multiple areas of practice, stated Viveca
Bissonnette, IIDA, CID, LEED AP, IIDA Vice President of Communications
and Associate at Carrier Johnson + CULTURE. The winning projects range
in size and scope but all exemplify IIDAs mission to enhance the quality
of life through innovation and excellence in interior design."
Judges for the competition included Suzanne Tick - President, Suzanne
Tick Inc.; D.B. Kim - Principal Designer, D.B. Kim Inc.; and Erla
Dogg Ingjaldsdottir, Associate IIDA - Principal, Minarc. The judging
took place February 28, 2009 in Chicago.
All winning projects not previously published will be featured in
the NeoCon issue of Interior Design Magazine, the publishing partner
for the competitions. The judges selection for Best of Competition
will be officially revealed and all winners will be celebrated at
COOL, IIDAs NeoCon Gala to be held Sunday, June 14.
Wing Luke Asian Museum also recently received a Special Merit Award
in the Historical Restoration category by ABC (Associated Builders
and Contractors).
SEATTLE- Olson Sundberg Kundig Allen Architects have designed the
new Wing Luke Asian Museum. The firms design preserves and restores
the historic fabric of the East Kong Yick Building and offers new
and expanded space to the Wing Luke Asian Museum, a Smithsonian Institution
affiliate and Americas premier pan-Asian Pacific American museum.
Rick Sundberg, principal of Olson Sundberg Kundig Allen, led the design.
The Wing Luke Asian Museum is a significant addition to Olson Sundberg
Kundig Allens portfolio of museums and cultural places, which includes
an award-winning renovation of Seattles Frye Art Museum, the Bellingham
Art and Childrens Museum (currently under construction), and the Sun
Valley Center for the Arts (currently in design). The new Wing Luke
Asian Museum, in Seattles Chinatown International District, offers
space for community meetings and events, public space for the neighborhood,
theatre space for performances and presentations, exhibit spaces for
community art and emerging Asian Pacific American artists, family-centered
learning environments and leadership development for neighborhood
youth.
The Wing Luke Asian Museum raised over $23.2 million for the new building
in the biggest fundraising effort in the organization's history. Since
the moment our Board set out on a course to create an expanded home
for this 40-year old institution, numerous public and private entities
as well as hundreds of individuals have made personal investments
in the Museums future, said Beth Takekawa, Executive Director of the
Wing Luke Asian Museum.We owe a huge thank you to our members and
supporters who have responded with overwhelming generosity and encouragement.
The design of the Wing Luke Asian Museum grew out of the original,
1910 multi-story building that served as a social center and living
quarters for Chinese, Japanese and Filipino immigrants. Drawing inspiration
from the buildings rich history, Olson Sundberg Kundig Allen saved
as much of the original building as possible. In addition to building
materials such as timbers cut out between floors the character and
scale of the building were maintained. On the upper floors, original
narrow doorways and corridors and small rooms preserve the intimacy
of the original space, and are a perfect venue for the museums immersion
exhibits.
This re-use and recycling play an important role in the buildings
sustainable strategies. Windows and doors were repaired and reinstalled,
fir joists were recycled as stair treads, and fire doors and other
no longer functional objects served as inspiration for furniture and
works of art. Operable windows and two-story lightwells encourage
natural air flow, while transparency between adjacent spaces and floors
allow daylight to filter down to the main entry level.
The new building is at once an art museum, cultural museum, and a
community center, and the architecture of the building responds to
the needs of its diverse users. I think the complexity of the program
is what ultimately gives the building its identity and character,
said architect Rick Sundberg. When one enters the museum, its a busy,
welcoming space. Daylight from the lightwells guides people up and
into the building. As one begins to move through the museum, it becomes
quiet and the spaces are more intimate. The architecture retreats
and the experience of the visitor is of primary importance, said Sundberg.
Even though the materials have rough textures, they have a welcoming
quality.
Olson Sundberg Kundig Allens project team includes Rick Sundberg,
Principal in Charge, Stephen Yamada-Heidner, Project Manager, Martha
Rogers, Project Architect, Misun Chung, Job Captain, and Debbie Kennedy,
Interiors.
Wing Luke Asian Art Museum image / information from Olson Sundberg
Kundig Allen Architects via SGLA 14 Oct 2008
Seattle Architect Studios
Seattle Architecture

Wing Luke Asian Art
Museum Seattle - Further Information on the Building
|
Olson Sundberg Kundig
Allen Architects : Tom Kundig, principal
Seattle Public Library

photo : Philippe Ruault
American Buildings
Tom Kundig
- Seattle architect
Washington
Buildings

World Architecture : e-architect
- key buildings across the globe
Comments / photos for the Wing Luke Asian Museum Seattle Public page
welcome:
info@e-architect.co.uk
Wing Luke Asian Art Museum
: page - adrian welch / isabelle lomholt |
|
|
|