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Ogden Museum of Southern Art
New Orleans
Concordia Architects + Errol Barron
/ Michael Toups Architects
A light-filled entry hall suggests
a unique program
© Robert Brantley
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For more photos click on 'photos
& drawings' above.
To see the people and products
behind this project click on 'people & products.'
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The new Ogden Museum exists as both an
important cultural institution as well as a major landmark,
complimenting the warehouse district context in which it resides.
The central feature of the building is a light-filled entry
hall, a very public space that unites the more intimate scale
of the galleries around it.
Inside the building, an l-shaped gallery
block wraps around the entry hall, which is described as a
lantern because of the way it filters light, casting a soft
glow onto the street and sidewalk below. Rarely more than
one room away from hall, the galleries, which are windowless
to protect the art, are domestic in scale, contrasting with
the entry hall's large public volume.
To change floors and circulate through
the galleries, visitors must pass through this central space.
To some, this large space will seem as much like a covered
outside room or piazza as a stair hall, because of its light
and scale. The architects' intent was, in part, to relieve
monotony through the contrast of spatial conditions: large/small,
light/dark, domestic/institutional, open/closed.
Formal name of Project:
Ogden Museum of Southern Art
Location:
New Orleans
Gross square
footage:
50,000 sq.ft.
Total construction
cost:
$9.4 million
Owner:
University of New Orleans
Architect:
A Joint Venture:
Concordia Architects + Errol Barron / Michael Toups Architects

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