The new building for the MAS | Museum aan de Stroom in
Antwerp, Belgium, designed by Neutelings Riedijk
Architects,
has been completed. From now on MAS enters the last
straight line towards the museum’s opening in May 2011.
All
that remains is to move the thousands of collection
items.
The location
The MAS | Museum aan de Stroom stands between the old
docks in the centre of the Eilandje. This old harbour area is
the most important city renovation project in the centre of
Antwerp and is in full development as a new dazzling city
district.
The building
The MAS was designed as a sixty-metre high tower. Ten
gigantic natural stone trunks are piled up as a physical
demonstration of the heaviness of history, full of historical
objects that are the legacy of our ancestors. It is a
storehouse of stacked history in the middle of the old
harbour docks. Every storey of the tower has been rotated
a quarter turn, creating a gigantic spiral staircase. This
spiral space, in which a facade of corrugated glass is
inserted, forms a public city gallery.
The spiral route
A route of escalators leads the visitors up from the square
up to the top of the tower. The story of the city, its
harbour and inhabitants is told in the spiral tower. Visitors
can enter a museum hall on every level and reflect on the
history of the dead city, while on the way up breath-taking
panoramas unfold above the living city. The top of the
tower accommodates a restaurant, a party room and a
panoramic terrace, where the present is celebrated and
the future is planned.
The facades
Facades, floors, walls and ceilings of the tower are entirely
covered with large panels of hand-cut red Indian
sandstone, evoking the image of a monumental stone
sculpture. The four-colour variation of the natural stone
panels has been distributed over the facade on the basis of
a computer-generated pattern. The spiral gallery is
finished with a gigantic curtain of corrugated glass. Its play
of light and shadow, of transparency and translucence
turns this corrugated glass facade into a light
counterweight to the heavy stone sculpture.
The ornaments
In order to soften the monumental tower volume, a pattern
of metal ornaments has been attached to the facade as a
veil. The ornaments have the shape of hands, the symbol
of the City of Antwerp. This pattern is continued inside the
building by means of metal medallions, cast according to a
design by Tom Hautekiet with a text by Tom Lanoye.
The museum square
The museum square at the base of the tower is an integral
part of the design. The square has been designed in the
same red natural stone as the tower and is surrounded by
pavilions and terraces as an urban area for events and
open-air exhibits. The central part of the plaza is sunken
and forms a framework for the large mosaic by Luc
Tuymans.
The building is set up as a flexible museum machine which
can be used and arranged in all sorts of ways on the basis
of the changing visions of curators, scenographers and
concession holders. Neutelings Riedijk Architects has no
further involvement in the elaboration of the interior or the
scenography. The scenography of the first exhibits is to be
set-up by B-Architecten; the cafeteria, party hall and the
restaurant by the decorators of the concession holders,
and the pavilions by the Founders interior decorators.
The 62-metre high MAS tower is supported by a 12x12
metre central core of concrete poured on site. Steel
frames are suspended from this core, extending 12
metres. The frames form a balance structure on either
side of the core in accordance with the milk maid principle.
The frames are still partially visible in the exhibition halls
as large V components that divide the areas of the halls.
The outer walls are suspended from the outer ends of the
frames, which in turn support the floor components. The
floor components consist of 12-metre long prefabricated
concrete TT girders. The typical main sculptural form of
the building is created in this way without a single column,
as a stack of cantilevered halls.
The monolithic nature of the building is softened by the
corrugated glass curtain that enfolds the gallery. This
transparent facade is made up of large glass sheets, 5.5
metres high and 1.80 metres wide. The sheets are curved
into an S wave with a depth of 60 cm, which stabilises
every glass sheet and makes it self-supporting, so the
sheets can stand free on the floor without any window
profiles. In this way, maximum transparency is
accomplished without interrupting components. In the
corners two glass panes support one another up to a height
of 11 metres. A steel tube suspended from a heavy chain
ensures horizontal transfer of the wind loads.
The basic assumption of the MAS design was to achieve a
low-energy and sustainable concept within the strict
international standards imposed on the indoor climate of a
museum. In order to prevent this strict climate
requirement from applying to the entire building, the
option was selected to establish different climate zones in
the building: the museum halls on the one hand, and the
gallery on the other.
MAS Museum by Neutelings Riedijk Architects
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- Elena Sommariva
- 20 May 2010