Skissernas Museum: Carrier of Identity
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Skissernas Museum: Carrier of Identity

Posted on July 30, 2018 by martabuges

Categories: , , , ,

Since Art Historian Ragnar Josephson started to gather an archive documenting the artistic process about 80 years ago, Skissernas Musuem, Museum of Artistic Process and Public Art, has gradually grown to a large cluster of buildings that, apart from housing the world’s largest collection of sketches, is an important carrier of the identity of the Museum. This is the first extension in the museum’s history that solely addresses its interface, with foyer, restaurant, shop and a multi-purpose hall.

The new addition of slightly bent volumes projects into the existing sculpture park, releasing its grip on the street grid and instead latching on to the diagonal approach through the park. This is the axis of entrance that the large extension from 1959, by architect Hans Westman, was designed for. The new foyer space is very tall to take in both this existing board formed concrete volume and the tall trees in the park, but also to be able to stand up next to the rather massive existing museum volumes. The new restaurant, however, draws on respect for a more recent addition from 2005, by architect Johan Celsing, and is kept low so as not to intervene with the previous extension’s large window facing the park. The original entrance volume from 1959 becomes integrated as a shop and reception.

The corten steel, favored by sculptors ever since the material was invented, handles the adjacent historic red brick architecture as well as the rough materiality of the existing concrete volume, yet contrasts to these with the potential of sharp detailing inherent in a panel material. The free arrangement of the façades is composed carefully to get particular views from, into, and through the added building volumes – to reach a transparency without an actual large surface of glass.

As for the multi-function hall in the existing inner courtyard of the museum, a great variation in height of the surrounding buildings and a problem of how to support loads in the underlying structure – as well as a desire not to disturb the existing façades around the courtyard – led to a solution with a roof soaring high, resting on four columns, and surrounded by clerestorial light. The roof spans 27 meters and its ceiling is a hovering plate of mirroring aluminum, all intended to achieve a spatial experience that is not entirely indoor, but rather maintains some of the character of an open inner courtyard.The furniture of the restaurant, foyer, and shop were all designed by Elding Oscarson, and they deliberately transmit the unfinished character of a sketch, or prototype. Overall, the intention is for the new addition to add a valuable experience of architecture within the park, as the Museum gets an updated interface, becoming a more functional place for people to meet.

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Architects: Elding Oscarson

Location: Lund, Sweden

Area: 760 m2

Year: 2017

Photography: Åke E:son Lindman

Team: Jonas Elding (Partner in Charge), Johan Oscarson (Partner in Charge), Tristan Zelic (Project Architect), Matthias Salaets, Paolo Migliori, Yuko Maki, Gustaf Karlsson, Lovisa Lindström, Mattias Wingård, Jérome Malpel, Jennifer Heinfeld

Furniture design: Elding Oscarson

Consultants: Tyrens (Structural Engineer), Hagö Konsult (Mechanical Engineer), Ramböll (Electrical Engineer), Nivå (Landscape), Åkerlöf Hallin (Acoustical Engineer)

Client: Statens Fastighetsverk

Custom furniture maker: Källemo, Amorim, Xcen

General Contractor: NCC

Skissernas Museum: Carrier of Identity

Since Art Historian Ragnar Josephson started to gather an archive documenting the artistic process about 80 years ago, Skissernas Musuem, Museum of Artistic Process and Public Art, has gradually grown to a large cluster of buildings that, apart from housing the world’s largest collection of sketches, is an important carrier of the identity of the Museum. This is the first extension in the museum’s history that solely addresses its interface, with foyer, restaurant, shop and a multi-purpose hall.

The new addition of slightly bent volumes projects into the existing sculpture park, releasing its grip on the street grid and instead latching on to the diagonal approach through the park. This is the axis of entrance that the large extension from 1959, by architect Hans Westman, was designed for. The new foyer space is very tall to take in both this existing board formed concrete volume and the tall trees in the park, but also to be able to stand up next to the rather massive existing museum volumes. The new restaurant, however, draws on respect for a more recent addition from 2005, by architect Johan Celsing, and is kept low so as not to intervene with the previous extension’s large window facing the park. The original entrance volume from 1959 becomes integrated as a shop and reception.

The corten steel, favored by sculptors ever since the material was invented, handles the adjacent historic red brick architecture as well as the rough materiality of the existing concrete volume, yet contrasts to these with the potential of sharp detailing inherent in a panel material. The free arrangement of the façades is composed carefully to get particular views from, into, and through the added building volumes – to reach a transparency without an actual large surface of glass.

As for the multi-function hall in the existing inner courtyard of the museum, a great variation in height of the surrounding buildings and a problem of how to support loads in the underlying structure – as well as a desire not to disturb the existing façades around the courtyard – led to a solution with a roof soaring high, resting on four columns, and surrounded by clerestorial light. The roof spans 27 meters and its ceiling is a hovering plate of mirroring aluminum, all intended to achieve a spatial experience that is not entirely indoor, but rather maintains some of the character of an open inner courtyard.The furniture of the restaurant, foyer, and shop were all designed by Elding Oscarson, and they deliberately transmit the unfinished character of a sketch, or prototype. Overall, the intention is for the new addition to add a valuable experience of architecture within the park, as the Museum gets an updated interface, becoming a more functional place for people to meet.

Architects: Elding Oscarson

Location: Lund, Sweden

Area: 760 m2

Year: 2017

Photography: Åke E:son Lindman

urbanNext (March 28, 2024) Skissernas Museum: Carrier of Identity. Retrieved from https://urbannext.net/skissernas-museum/.
Skissernas Museum: Carrier of Identity.” urbanNext – March 28, 2024, https://urbannext.net/skissernas-museum/
urbanNext July 30, 2018 Skissernas Museum: Carrier of Identity., viewed March 28, 2024,<https://urbannext.net/skissernas-museum/>
urbanNext – Skissernas Museum: Carrier of Identity. [Internet]. [Accessed March 28, 2024]. Available from: https://urbannext.net/skissernas-museum/
Skissernas Museum: Carrier of Identity.” urbanNext – Accessed March 28, 2024. https://urbannext.net/skissernas-museum/
Skissernas Museum: Carrier of Identity.” urbanNext [Online]. Available: https://urbannext.net/skissernas-museum/. [Accessed: March 28, 2024]

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