flexiblefullpage -
billboard - default
interstitial1 - interstitial
catfish1 - bottom
Currently Reading

Rising above adversity: National Museum of African American History and Culture

Building Team Awards

Rising above adversity: National Museum of African American History and Culture

Gold Award: The Smithsonian Institution’s newest museum is a story of historical and construction resolve.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | June 7, 2017

Its striking cast-aluminum, 3,600-panel façade provides transparency into the museum’s above- ground interior space. Courtesy Brad Feinknopf.

This much-ballyhooed project, which sits on the last available lot within the National Mall in Washington, D.C., was first conceived 100 years ago. Its 56-month realization involved three GCs, four architects, more than 30 consultants, 200 subcontractors, and 5,000 craft workers.

At almost every turn, the Building Team faced obstacles, not the least being the District of Columbia’s high water table. Three-fifths of the museum is below grade, and its construction entailed a 70-foot-deep excavation of 350,000 cubic yards of dirt. The Building Team developed a support-of-excavation system that could withstand water pressure of 37,000 pounds per sf.

To meet the client’s request that all ground-floor and above-grade spaces be column free, the Building Team used four steel/cement structural cores to support the building’s superstructure and façade. 

 

Its below-ground attractions include a Contemplative Court, illuminated by natural light coming through an oculus onto a waterpool. Courtesy Brad Feinknop.

 

The museum, whose silhouette is designed to resemble a West African crown, is distinguished by “The Corona,” a striking curtain wall consisting of 3,600 panels, modeeld after ironwork in the American South. The original cast-bronze design was deemed too expensive, so the Building Team chose cast-aluminum panels that reduced the cost by $20 million. It also experimented with 20 colors and finishes to achieve the façade’s bronze tint.

Natural light streams through a 20-foot-diameter oculus into an underground Contemplative Court. Outside, a 200-foot-long porch, supported by two 32-ton columns, cantilevers 40 feet over a water feature.

The museum houses 36,000-plus artifacts and was literally built around two of them—an 80-foot-long Pullman railway car, and a guard tower from Louisiana’s notorious Angola Prison—that two 550-ton cranes lowered into place early in construction.

 

Building Team – Submitting firm, contractor: Clark Construction Group; Owner: The Smithsonian Institution; Architects: Adjaye Associates, Davis Brody Bond, SmithGroupJJR, The Freelon Group; Interior architects: Perkins+Will, Davis Brody Bond (below grade); Exhibit designer: Ralph Appelbaum Associates Structural engineers:   Robert Silman Associates (below grade), Guy Nordenson and Associates (above grade); MEP engineer: WSP USA; General contractor: Joint venture of Clark Construction, Smoot Construction, and H.J. Russell & Company' Construction manager: McKissack & McKissack; Landscape architect: Gustafson Guthrie Nichol

General Information – Size 409,000 sf Cost $413 million Construction time January 2012 to September 2016 Delivery method Design-bid-build

 

Return to the 2017 Building Team Awards landing page

Related Stories

Building Team Awards | Jun 14, 2017

17 projects earn BD+C's 2017 Building Team Awards

Of the 17 projects, one received a Platinum Award, six received Gold Awards, six received Silver Awards, two received Bronze Awards, and two received Honorable Mentions.

Building Team Awards | Jun 14, 2017

3D-printed office: Office of the Future

Dubai kicks off 3D-printing tech initiative with a novel office project.

Building Team Awards | Jun 14, 2017

A space for all: Lighthouse for the Blind and Visually Impaired

Nonprofit HQ fitout improves functionality, accessibility for blind and low-vision individuals.

Building Team Awards | Jun 13, 2017

Government campus reimagined: Intelligence Community Campus

Building Team converts 1940s campus into a sleek, modern home for U.S. intelligence agencies.

Building Team Awards | Jun 13, 2017

Secluded sanctuary: Alnoba leadership training center

Leadership training center becomes New England’s first Passive House building.

Building Team Awards | Jun 12, 2017

Circles and squares: Faena Arts Center

Silver Award: The Faena Arts Center’s forum is divided into two volumes, one a cylinder, the other a cube.

Building Team Awards | Jun 12, 2017

The right prescription: University of North Dakota School of Medicine & Health Sciences

Silver Award: North Dakota builds a new medical/health sciences school to train and retain more physicians.

Building Team Awards | Jun 12, 2017

Texas technopark: TechnipFMC John T. Gremp Campus

Silver Award: TechnipFMC’s new campus marks the start of a massive planned community in north Houston.

Building Team Awards | Jun 8, 2017

Quick turnaround: Partners HealthCare

Silver Award: A 2½-year project brings Partners HealthCare’s sprawling administrative functions under one roof.

Building Team Awards | Jun 8, 2017

Raising the bar: Zurich North American Headquarters

Silver Award: Forgoing a typical center-core design, the Zurich North America Headquarters rises 11 stories across three stacked bars.

boombox1 - default
boombox2 -
native1 -

More In Category




halfpage1 -

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021