Twisting façade formed from stacked, reclaimed timbers.
Courtesy BIG
Model
Courtesy BIG
Massing diagram: Existing Kimball Art Center
Courtesy BIG
Massing diagram: Two new galleries top out at 80 feet, the heigh…
Massing diagram: Two new galleries top out at 80 feet, the height of the historic Coalition Building, which was, until it burned down in the 1980s, Park City's tallest building.
Courtesy BIG
Massing diagram: Street-level gallery, which is oriented to the …
Massing diagram: Street-level gallery, which is oriented to the city's existing grid.
Courtesy BIG
Massing diagram: Sky Gallery, which is oriented toward Heber Ave…
Massing diagram: Sky Gallery, which is oriented toward Heber Avenue, the more recent gateway to the city.
Courtesy BIG
Massing diagram: Twisting volume that accomodates directional sh…
Massing diagram: Twisting volume that accomodates directional shift
Courtesy BIG
Massing diagram: Program, identifying the restaurant and adminis…
Massing diagram: Program, identifying the restaurant and administrative spaces sandwiched between the two new galleries, and the education spaces housed in the existing art center structure.
Courtesy BIG
Interior.
Courtesy BIG
Interior stair leading to upper levels.
Courtesy BIG
Restaurant, overlooking the lobby space below.
Courtesy BIG
Performance venue.
Courtesy BIG
Gallery
Copenhagen-based BIG’s new addition to the Kimball Art Center in Park City, Utah, expands exhibition space for the center, which serves as both a community hub and a theater for Sundance House, a screening venue for the 10-day Sundance Film Festival. “They wanted a landmark, but it [Park City] is, at the same time, a very tight-knit community,” says project leader Leon Rost. “We really needed to find a way to resonate with the history.” The addition comprises two stacked gallery spaces that can be used as screening rooms during the festival. The lower volume is oriented along the original city grid, but the upper volume is angled toward Heber Avenue, the newer gateway to the city. The addition’s walls are formed from stacked timbers—salvaged from a defunct trestle that crossed, and then collapsed into, the Great Salt Lake—that twist to accommodate the shift. “It has a textural quality,” Rost says of the wood. The building is targeting LEED Platinum, and has an expected completion date of 2015.