• Login / Join
  • About
  • •
  • Contact
  • •
  • Advertising
bustler logo
bustler logo
  • News
  • Competitions
  • Events
  • Bustler is powered by Archinect
  • Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

  • Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • Search

    Search in

  • Submit

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event
  • Login / Join
  • News|Competitions|Events
  • Search
    | Submit
    | Follow
  • Search in

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event

    Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • About|Contact|Advertising
  • Login / Join
Tagged: heneghan peng architects

Heneghan Peng wins Moscow’s NCCA competition

By Bustler Editors|

Friday, Dec 27, 2013

Winning design for Moscow’s new National Center for Contemporary Arts (NCCA) by Heneghan Peng Architects. Image/Visualization by Luxigon

Christmas came early for Heneghan Peng Architects: the Irish firm was announced on December 23 as the final winner of the international competiton for Moscow’s new National Center for Contemporary Arts (NCCA).

The other two finalist teams were Spanish Nieto Sobejano Arquitectos and Russian practice MEL. Probably not so high up on the NCCA Board of Trustees' nice list...

Read on for a project description of Heneghan Peng's winning proposal.

"This proposal positions the NCCA building as a vertical element at the centre of Khodynskoe Pole rising above Aviapark. The verticality concentrates the activities on the ground to create an intensity at a single point in this vast space. Given the scale and relative sparsenesss of activities in the area, the aim is to concentrate the flow of people to generate an excitement and energy which can then expand into other areas as the park develops."

New NCCA by by Heneghan Peng Architects. Image/Visualization by Luxigon

"In this proposal, the exhibition spaces are designed as a series of stacked galleries allowing people to either visit a particular gallery of interest or browse through the entire collection. The advantage of the vertical organisation is that galleries are quickly accessible, allowing one to go straight to a single floor without moving horizontally through layers of gallery."

New NCCA by by Heneghan Peng Architects

"The landscape proposal responds to the scale of the park, and to its history as an airfield. The Runways are retained as elements of intensity and activity while the remaining areas are conceived of as a naturalistic landscape. In the middle of all this development, on the edge of this large city, an intense natural environment is proposed to afford a space apart from the everyday world of apartments and cities. The Runways are proposed as the exception to this intense nature, becoming home to a new range of activities: ice rinks, formal flower gardens, and skateboard areas."

New NCCA by by Heneghan Peng Architects. Image/Visualization by Luxigon

"The organisational strategy is driven by the following considerations:
— Locating the exhibition spaces as a destination at the top of the Building.
— Utilising the NCCA building to make a focal point of activities on the ground floor.
— Creating an awareness of all of the Museum’s activities for the visitor.

As with any travel plan, the main issue is how easily and quickly one can navigate the building; an escalator leads from the foyer to the exhibition, travelling through the storage workshop and admin areas. The escalator cuts through the ‘working museum’ as if through archaeological layers, viewing the ‘back story’ of the exhibition."

New NCCA by by Heneghan Peng Architects

"There are a multitude of possible routes to facilitate a multitude of visitors, from browsers to specialists. A multi-level Foyer allows the design to negotiate the various site and service challenges while responding to the possibilities offered by the park. The NCCA is situated at a nexus, a vertical core linking Park, Aviapark and Museum.

Exhibition spaces are designed as flexible space, as trays of varying sizes and heights which can accommodate a variety of exhibitions. The Architect provides the infrastructure, the curators and artists make the Museum."

Images courtesy of the NCCA competition.

Related

moscow ● international ● heneghan peng architects ● design competition ● cultural center ● museum ● national center for contemporary arts ● ncca ● russia

Share

  • Follow

    1 Comment

  • Alexander Walter ·  Sep 26, 18 10:25 PM

    UPDATE: Russia cancels plans for ambitious NCCA museum in Moscow due to lack of funding http://bit.ly/2xVi7ho
  • Comment as :

Heneghan Peng wins Moscow’s NCCA competition

Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

Next page » Loading

Heneghan Peng wins Moscow’s NCCA competition

By Bustler Editors|

Friday, Dec 27, 2013

Share

Winning design for Moscow’s new National Center for Contemporary Arts (NCCA) by Heneghan Peng Architects. Image/Visualization by Luxigon

Related

moscow ● international ● heneghan peng architects ● design competition ● cultural center ● museum ● national center for contemporary arts ● ncca ● russia

Christmas came early for Heneghan Peng Architects: the Irish firm was announced on December 23 as the final winner of the international competiton for Moscow’s new National Center for Contemporary Arts (NCCA).

The other two finalist teams were Spanish Nieto Sobejano Arquitectos and Russian practice MEL. Probably not so high up on the NCCA Board of Trustees' nice list...

Read on for a project description of Heneghan Peng's winning proposal.

"This proposal positions the NCCA building as a vertical element at the centre of Khodynskoe Pole rising above Aviapark. The verticality concentrates the activities on the ground to create an intensity at a single point in this vast space. Given the scale and relative sparsenesss of activities in the area, the aim is to concentrate the flow of people to generate an excitement and energy which can then expand into other areas as the park develops."

New NCCA by by Heneghan Peng Architects. Image/Visualization by Luxigon

"In this proposal, the exhibition spaces are designed as a series of stacked galleries allowing people to either visit a particular gallery of interest or browse through the entire collection. The advantage of the vertical organisation is that galleries are quickly accessible, allowing one to go straight to a single floor without moving horizontally through layers of gallery."

New NCCA by by Heneghan Peng Architects

"The landscape proposal responds to the scale of the park, and to its history as an airfield. The Runways are retained as elements of intensity and activity while the remaining areas are conceived of as a naturalistic landscape. In the middle of all this development, on the edge of this large city, an intense natural environment is proposed to afford a space apart from the everyday world of apartments and cities. The Runways are proposed as the exception to this intense nature, becoming home to a new range of activities: ice rinks, formal flower gardens, and skateboard areas."

New NCCA by by Heneghan Peng Architects. Image/Visualization by Luxigon

"The organisational strategy is driven by the following considerations:
— Locating the exhibition spaces as a destination at the top of the Building.
— Utilising the NCCA building to make a focal point of activities on the ground floor.
— Creating an awareness of all of the Museum’s activities for the visitor.

As with any travel plan, the main issue is how easily and quickly one can navigate the building; an escalator leads from the foyer to the exhibition, travelling through the storage workshop and admin areas. The escalator cuts through the ‘working museum’ as if through archaeological layers, viewing the ‘back story’ of the exhibition."

New NCCA by by Heneghan Peng Architects

"There are a multitude of possible routes to facilitate a multitude of visitors, from browsers to specialists. A multi-level Foyer allows the design to negotiate the various site and service challenges while responding to the possibilities offered by the park. The NCCA is situated at a nexus, a vertical core linking Park, Aviapark and Museum.

Exhibition spaces are designed as flexible space, as trays of varying sizes and heights which can accommodate a variety of exhibitions. The Architect provides the infrastructure, the curators and artists make the Museum."

Images courtesy of the NCCA competition.

Share

  • Follow

    1 Comment

  • Alexander Walter ·  Sep 26, 18 10:25 PM

    UPDATE: Russia cancels plans for ambitious NCCA museum in Moscow due to lack of funding http://bit.ly/2xVi7ho
  • Comment as :

Archinect JobsArchinect Jobs

The Archinect Job Board attracts the world's top architectural design talents.

VIEW ALL JOBS POST A JOB

Intermediate Architectural Designer, Ground-Up - New York Office

Fogarty Finger

Intermediate Architectural Designer, Ground-Up - New York Office

New York, NY, US

Project Architect at High End Boutique Townhouse Firm in BK

Steering House Design and Development

Project Architect at High End Boutique Townhouse Firm in BK

Brooklyn, NY, US

Studio Operations Manager

Obata Noblin Office

Studio Operations Manager

San Francisco, CA, US

Architectural Technical Coordinator / Job Captain

MQ Architecture

Architectural Technical Coordinator / Job Captain

New York, NY, US

Intermediate Architectural Designer, Multifamily Interiors - New York Office

Fogarty Finger

Intermediate Architectural Designer, Multifamily Interiors - New York Office

New York, NY, US

Architectural Interior Designer- Hospitality

Ujas Hotel Furniture Inc.

Architectural Interior Designer- Hospitality

Rancho Santa Margarita, CA, US

Director of Interior Design

Payette

Director of Interior Design

Boston, MA, US

Intermediate Architect (Advanced Revit User)

O'Neil Langan Architects

Intermediate Architect (Advanced Revit User)

New York, NY, US

Junior Architect (Staten Island, NY)

Giuseppe Bonomo Architecture PLLC

Junior Architect (Staten Island, NY)

Staten Island, NY, US

Senior Architectural Designer, Commercial Interiors - Boston Office

Fogarty Finger

Senior Architectural Designer, Commercial Interiors - Boston Office

Boston, MA, US

Next page » Loading