Project Details
- Project Name
- David Zwirner
- Location
-
New York ,NY ,United States
- Architect
- Selldorf Architects
- Client/Owner
- David Zwirner
- Project Scope
- New Construction
- Size
- 30,000 sq. feet
- Year Completed
- 2013
- Awards
- 2016 AIA New York Design Awards
- Shared by
-
Architect,Hanley
- Consultants
-
General Contractor: Eurostruct,Structural Engineer: DeSimone Consulting Engineers,AltieriSeborWieber,Reginald Hough Associates,Geotechnical Engineer: Langan Engineering & Environmental Services,Atelier Ten,Lighting Designer: Renfro Design Group, Atelier Ten,Piet Oudolf,Goode Green,James R. Gainfort, AIA Consulting Architects,Roux Associates,Shen Milsom Wilke,IROS Elevator Design Services,Acotech Services,Jam Consultants,Construction Specifications
- Project Status
- Built
Project Description
Category: Work
Award
Once Manhattan’s warehouse sector, Chelsea is today a contemporary art gallery district. But with the rise of the High Line and the high-end residential buildings it has attracted, Chelsea might be something else tomorrow—which is why the galleries that are committed to staying are either consolidating or expanding. David Zwirner, one of New York’s four mega-giant galleries, is leading the charge for more space with its new 30,000-square-foot gallery building.
Designed by local firm Selldorf Architects, the building’s exposed concrete façade references the neighborhood’s industrial past while also projecting its own modern program. The museum-quality (and museum-sized) exhibition space includes a column-free, 5,000-square-foot ground-floor gallery with a nearly 19-foot-high ceiling—built for showcasing a range of works by some of the world’s most innovative artists. The concrete floors and sawtooth skylights in this gallery extend the industrial language of the façade into the primary program space.
A skylit stairwell rises all five levels of the building, connecting primary and secondary galleries with the building’s other function: as a working office for art dealers, art handlers, artists, and art assistants. Selldorf’s sliding teak system for the storefront engages both curious passersby and committed collectors, establishing an inviting portal into the neutral context of the white-cube space. The architects’ selection of materials and textures balances the requirements for inward- and outward-facing spaces meant for private work and public exhibition alike. “Even in New York, where so many buildings are really background buildings, this fits in really well with what’s going on in the street and avoids being just another drab gallery,” juror Cathy Lang Ho said. —Kriston Capps