• 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: why architcture

WHY Architecture team proposal selected by the Louvre for 2027 Byzantine and Eastern Christian Art expansion

By Josh Niland|

Wednesday, Sep 25, 2024

The Roman route in the courtyard of the Sphinx, after renovation of the glass roof Image: © WHY-BGC.

The Louvre Museum’s recent undertaking to redesign space for its newly formed Department of Byzantine and Eastern Christian Art will be carried out by WHY Architecture and local French partner BGC following the results of an international juried competition.

The project will yield slightly over 59,000 square feet divided into two upper and lower levels. The first being for the Louvre’s Byzantine collection and organized around an over 24,000-square-foot circulatory route connecting the ground floor and mezzanine of the museum's Denon wing; and the second, 'Roman route' presenting the Department of Greek, Etruscan and Roman Antiquities collection in one 35,500-square-foot space for the first time.

The Byzantine route with the mosaic of Qabr Hiram. Image: © WHY-BGC

The combined WHY-BGC proposal was selected on July 15th of this year, the jury citing its "museographic connections that the project creates between the work" and its "ambitious scenography." 

The pathways approach creates a dialogue between both civilizations and a third space designed conjointly for the Department of Islamic Arts by Rudy Ricciotti, Mario Bellini, and Renaud Piérard.

View of the start of the Byzantine route. Image: © WHY-BGC

Laurence des Cars, President and Director of the Louvre, says: "By connecting these collections, the future tours – more fluid, readable, open – will allow our visitors to better grasp the meeting points between different civilizations, the richness of exchanges, influences and connections. At the heart of the Louvre, it is these resonances that are the most precious; they are also the most delicate to bring to life and transmit. This challenge has been brilliantly met by WHY-BGC with an elegant proposal that will perfectly magnify the works and historic spaces of the museum."

The Byzantine route with the mosaic of Qabr Hiram. Image: © WHY-BGC

WHY is also working on the $70 million reconfiguring and recontextualization of the Arts of Africa, Oceania, and the Americas galleries at the Metropolitan Museum of Art for 2025. BGC, which specializes in scenography, was founded by Giovanna Comana and Iva Berthon Gajšak in Paris in 2009. The Louvre expects the project to be inaugurated in 2027.

RELATED NEWS I.M. Pei's Grand Louvre wins 2017 AIA Twenty-Five Year Award

Related

louvre ● paris ● competition ● expansion ● byzantine ● why architcture ● scenography ● bgc ● france ● europe ● museum
WHY Architecture
WHY Architecture

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

WHY Architecture team proposal selected by the Louvre for 2027 Byzantine and Eastern Christian Art expansion

Louisville Speed Art Museum Commissions wHY Architecture for Expansion

Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

Next page » Loading

WHY Architecture team proposal selected by the Louvre for 2027 Byzantine and Eastern Christian Art expansion

By Josh Niland|

Wednesday, Sep 25, 2024

Share

The Roman route in the courtyard of the Sphinx, after renovation of the glass roof Image: © WHY-BGC.

Related

louvre ● paris ● competition ● expansion ● byzantine ● why architcture ● scenography ● bgc ● france ● europe ● museum
WHY Architecture
WHY Architecture

The Louvre Museum’s recent undertaking to redesign space for its newly formed Department of Byzantine and Eastern Christian Art will be carried out by WHY Architecture and local French partner BGC following the results of an international juried competition.

The project will yield slightly over 59,000 square feet divided into two upper and lower levels. The first being for the Louvre’s Byzantine collection and organized around an over 24,000-square-foot circulatory route connecting the ground floor and mezzanine of the museum's Denon wing; and the second, 'Roman route' presenting the Department of Greek, Etruscan and Roman Antiquities collection in one 35,500-square-foot space for the first time.

The Byzantine route with the mosaic of Qabr Hiram. Image: © WHY-BGC

The combined WHY-BGC proposal was selected on July 15th of this year, the jury citing its "museographic connections that the project creates between the work" and its "ambitious scenography." 

The pathways approach creates a dialogue between both civilizations and a third space designed conjointly for the Department of Islamic Arts by Rudy Ricciotti, Mario Bellini, and Renaud Piérard.

View of the start of the Byzantine route. Image: © WHY-BGC

Laurence des Cars, President and Director of the Louvre, says: "By connecting these collections, the future tours – more fluid, readable, open – will allow our visitors to better grasp the meeting points between different civilizations, the richness of exchanges, influences and connections. At the heart of the Louvre, it is these resonances that are the most precious; they are also the most delicate to bring to life and transmit. This challenge has been brilliantly met by WHY-BGC with an elegant proposal that will perfectly magnify the works and historic spaces of the museum."

The Byzantine route with the mosaic of Qabr Hiram. Image: © WHY-BGC

WHY is also working on the $70 million reconfiguring and recontextualization of the Arts of Africa, Oceania, and the Americas galleries at the Metropolitan Museum of Art for 2025. BGC, which specializes in scenography, was founded by Giovanna Comana and Iva Berthon Gajšak in Paris in 2009. The Louvre expects the project to be inaugurated in 2027.

RELATED NEWS I.M. Pei's Grand Louvre wins 2017 AIA Twenty-Five Year Award

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

Archinect JobsArchinect Jobs

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

VIEW ALL JOBS POST A JOB

Intermediate Architect - Retail (AutoCAD-based)

O'Neil Langan Architects

Intermediate Architect - Retail (AutoCAD-based)

New York, NY, US

Marketing Manager

PBDW Architects

Marketing Manager

New York, NY, US

Architectural Designer II

mdg | m-design group

Architectural Designer II

New York, NY, US

Junior Architectural Designer, Ground-Up - New York Office

Fogarty Finger

Junior Architectural Designer, Ground-Up - New York Office

New York, NY, US

Director of Interior Design

Payette

Director of Interior Design

Boston, MA, US

Job Captain

Studio AR&D Architects

Job Captain

Los Angeles, CA, US

Architect

ThinkForm Architects

Architect

Hopewell, NJ, US

Intermediate Architectural Designer, Ground-Up - New York Office

Fogarty Finger

Intermediate Architectural Designer, Ground-Up - New York Office

New York, NY, US

Lead Design Architect

The American Housing Corporation

Lead Design Architect

Austin, TX, US

Designer

Jayson Architecture

Designer

San Francisco, CA, US

Next page » Loading