Kindermuseum for the Jewish Museum, Berlin Building Proposal, German Architecture Images
Kindermuseum for the Jewish Museum in Berlin
Architecture Competition Winners, Germany design by Olson Kundig Architects, USA.
Architects: Olson Kundig
Location: Berlin, Germany
Kindermuseum for the Jewish Museum
13 Feb 2017
Kindermuseum for the Jewish Museum
Alan Maskin, Owner/Principal at Olson Kundig, has won first prize in the Jewish Museum Berlin Foundation’s competition for a new Kindermuseum. The two-stage, international design competition was announced on January 18, 2016, and first, second, and third prizes were selected from the entries for this second phase combining architectural and exhibit design. Models from the entries were displayed at the Altbau at the Jewish Museum Berlin until Thursday, July 28, 2016.
The story of Noah’s Ark was the competition concept set forth by the Jewish Museum Berlin. The flood narrative is deeply rooted in Abrahamic cultures. “The design by Olson Kundig has the potential to unpack the biblical story in all its relevance, as well as building connections with the present day―rescuing people and animals, the relationship between nature and civilization, and the chance to make new beginnings,” says Peter Schäfer, Director of the Jewish Museum. Olson Kundig’s design includes interactive installations that appeal to the imagination, while scientific elements develop the flood narrative’s thematic diversity.
The competition site is part of an artistic and creative center that is located on the Jewish Museum Berlin campus. The space assigned to the Kindermuseum is in the Eric F. Ross Building, a concrete and glass structure built in the 1960s that is a former wholesale flower market hall. Named after Eric F. Ross, one of the Jewish Museum’s greatest supporters, it has housed the W. Michael Blumenthal Academy since 2012―designed by Daniel Libeskind.
The jury that awarded first prize to Olson Kundig and recommended its implementation described their decision: “The scenography is extremely attractive and professional in terms of museum pedagogy. Its use of the Noah’s Ark motif playfully picks up on topical and relevant themes such as diversity, migration, creation, second chances, and new beginnings. The visitor is Noah, and can experience the multiple facets of these topics―on their own or in interaction and role-play.”
This marks Alan Maskin’s second win in an international design competition this year―his first was for “Welcome To The Fifth Façade” in Blank Space’s Fairy Tales competition. Alan reacted to the announcement of Olson Kundig being selected as the first prize winner: “We are thrilled to have been awarded first place in this competition. The Noah’s Ark story, and the hundreds of flood narratives that precede the Old Testament story were a source of inspiration to our team. Our design approach was to create a modern retelling of the ancient story―an experience that provides a sense of hope and possibility to the people who will visit it.”
About Alan Maskin
Alan Maskin is an owner and principal at Olson Kundig. For more than two decades he has focused primarily on the design of cultural projects including the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Visitor Center, Secret Garden in Uijeongbu, South Korea, and the Bezos Center for Innovation at the Museum of History and Industry (MOHAI). His work has been published in a variety of national and international media including The New York Times, Metropolis, The Los Angeles Times, Architectural Record and The Wall Street Journal.
Maskin’s work has been recognized by regional, national and international award programs, including an American Alliance of Museums Media & Technology MUSE Award for Interpretive Interactive Installations, a SEGD Global Design Award and a Northwest Design Award for Best in Commercial Design. In addition to his design work, Alan co-directed and curated the firm’s experimental work space, [storefront] and its subsequent series of site-specific collaborative installations around the globe called: Itinerant Projects.
About Olson Kundig
Now in its fifth decade of practice, Olson Kundig is a full-service design firm whose work includes residences, hospitality projects, commercial and mixed-use design, academic buildings, museums and exhibition design, interior design, product and accessories design, visual identities, and places of worship for clients around the globe. The firm is led by five owners – Jim Olson, Tom Kundig, Kirsten R. Murray, Alan Maskin and Kevin Kudo-King – who are supported by a staff of 150 in the historic Pioneer Square neighborhood of downtown Seattle.
Kindermuseum for the Jewish Museum in Berlin – Building Information
Olson Kundig Design Team:
Alan Maskin, Owner/Principal, Design Principal
Stephen Yamada-Heidner, Principal
Marlene Chen, Principal
Jerome Tryon, Architectural Staff
Juan Ferreira, Architectural Staff
Specialist planners:
Structural engineering: Karen Eisenloffel, EiSat GmbH, Berlin
Climate engineering: Thomas Auer, Transsolar KlimaEngineering, Stuttgart
Fire protection: Peter Stanek, Architektur- und Sachverständigenbüro, Berlin
Local architect: Philip Engelbrecht, Architekturbüro Engelbrecht, Berlin
Structural engineering: Jay Taylor, Magnusson Klemencic Associates, Seattle
Cost consultant: Andrew Cluness, C&N Consultants, Inc., Seattle
Exhibition fabrication: Kevin Belcher, Pacific Studio, Seattle
Kindermuseum for the Jewish Museum in Berlin images / information received 130217
Location: Berlin, Germany, western Europe
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