Antwerp, Belgium
Client: City of Antwerp in cooperation with AG Vespa
Completion Date: February 2010
Program: A ten-story, 210,510-square-foot museum of the city of Antwerp, with exhibition galleries, a restaurant, an event space, and a panoramic terrace, as well as a plaza that includes a museum shop and a mosaic by Luc Tuymans. The project is part of the renewal of the city's once-busy harbor district, which now includes residential towers, the city archive, and the ballet.
Design Concept and Solution: The architects wanted to design a monument to Antwerp's history while spotlighting the city in its present form. Shaping the museum like a monolithic sculpture, they cantilevered all ten stories and rotated each of them a quarter turn, like steps in a spiral staircase. To extend the sculptural metaphor they selected a tactile cladding—red sandstone from India, hand-cut and unpolished—and countered its heft with a facade of corrugated glass that spans the gaps created by the cantilevers. The glass-and-sandstone facade forms a kind of vertical gallery with views overlooking the city. Visitors ascending the gallery on escalators can cycle through a short exhibition telling the story of Antwerp; those who venture into the heart of the museum receive the full version as they pass through a series of black-box rooms featuring exhibits and audiovisual displays.
Total construction cost: € 33.4 million
Architect:
Neutelings Riedijk Architects
P.O. Box 527
3000 AM Rotterdam
The Netherlands
Phone +31 (0)10 404 66 77
Fax +31 (0)10 414 27 12
www.neutelings-riedijk.com