WAN AWARDS 2013

SATURDAY 25 MAY 2013

SEARCH   
 
 
LIVE TENDERS News Review World Architecture Day 2013 Jobs Award News
 
 
Previous Next
 
Lower East Side Tenement Museum Visitors Center, New York, United States 
Friday 20 Jul 2012
 
Time capsule to the past
 
Copyright Rivera-ArchPhoto
 
Your comments on this project

No.of Comments: 0

 Add comments | More comments 

Be the first to comment

New anchor for historic NYC neighbourhood


The Lower East Side Tenement Museum - comprising three separate buildings at 91 Orchard Street ('Community Resource Building'), 93 Orchard Street ('Historic Building'), and 103 Orchard Street ('Public Building') - takes literal and figurative cues from the architectural fabric and the vibrant history of the neighbourhood to create a unique institution singularly dedicated to the understanding of the immigrant experience in the United States.

As the first and only museum in the US to commemorate the history of urban, working-class immigrants, The Tenement Museum serves as a critical piece of American history while demonstrating its continued relevance. Educational outreach is a critical component of its mission, but in order to enhance such services, the Museum recognised the need for revitalised and restored facilities at 91 and 97 Orchard and, in the case of 103 Orchard, a completely refreshed public face.

On one of the most prominent corners of the Lower East Side, where Delancey meets Orchard, the new storefront for the Museum at 103 Orchard creates a physical gateway for the neighbourhood. Previously home to diverse retail establishments throughout the community's evolution, it has served as an economic anchor to the neighborhood and so was fitting to restore it as the public 'face' of the Museum. Now transformed into a transparent, open, and inviting storefront, the space literally embodies the Museum's mission: 'Revealing the past. Challenging the future'.

Where architectural and structural elements were uncovered, retained, and exposed from previous renovations, others served as inspiration for modern elements: new tiles take inspiration from 1800s colours and patterns used throughout the building while a remnant of Victorian wallpaper serves as the inspiration for proposed future ironwork. Modern technology integrated throughout helps the Museum further expand upon its mission, through a dedicated film viewing room, full-size professional kitchen, and art gallery/flexible space for community use.

Key Facts

Status Completed
Value 0(m€)
Perkins Eastman
www.perkinseastman.com

More projects by this architect

Avenues: The World School

Porter Street Residences

Westside Multimodal Transit Centre (WSMMTC)

The Interchange

Kumkang Penterium IT Tower

More Projects


Latest Jobs in New York

Senior Project Manager for Healthcare

Project Manager

Architectural Designer

Project Lead

Architectural Designer

All jobs in New York

WAD 2013
ECOWAN