Project Details
- Project Name
- Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad Visitor Center
- Location
-
4068 Golden Hill Road
MD
- Architect
- GWWO Architects
- Client/Owner
- Maryland Park Service and National Park Service
- Project Types
- Cultural
- Project Scope
- New Construction
- Size
- 15,786 sq. feet
- Year Completed
- 2017
- Awards
- 2018 AIA - Local Awards
- Shared by
- GWWO Inc./Architects
- Consultants
-
Architect of Record: Sidhu Associates,Electrical Engineer: Sidhu Associates,Plumbing Engineer: Sidhu Associates,Structural Engineer: Faisant Associates, Inc.,Civil Engineer: Andrews Miller & Associates,Geotechnical Engineer: TLB Associates, Inc.,Landscape Architect: Mahan Rykiel Associates,Interior Designer: Peristyle,Technology Integrator: USSi Inc.,Other: Haley Sharpe Design,Other: WFT Engineering, Inc.,Other: Kumi Construction Management,Building Enclosure/Artwork: HCD International
- Certifications & Designations
- LEED Silver
- Project Status
- Built
- Cost
- $21,000,000
Project Description
The design for the new LEED Silver Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad Visitor Center expresses the importance of traveling northward to escape the circumstances of slavery through an integrated site, building, and exhibit design.
Conceived as a series of abstracted forms that can be interpreted in many ways—from the farmstead vernacular of the region to stations along the Underground Railroad—the new complex immerses visitors in the story of Tubman’s life.
Joined by a shared entry plaza and terrace, the two structures of the complex, one exhibit and one administrative, frame a view north, expressing the importance of traveling northward to escape the circumstances of slavery. The space between the buildings grows wider as visitors venture north—a metaphor for freedom—and the view to the south is truncated by the splay of the buildings, suggesting a sense of oppression similar to that associated with the slaveholding states.
Clad in zinc panels, the three exhibit volumes will develop a dull, self-healing patina—a similar outcome hoped for the nation’s attitude towards slavery—while the southern volume, finished in wood siding, will weather to gray overtime. Just as the journey north was not a perfectly linear one for those seeking freedom, the design of the interpretive spaces allows visitors to take detours away from the main route to discover and learn. Views out offer a constant connection to the Blackwater landscape, the memorial garden, and freedom, enhancing the overall interpretive experience. Upon exiting the center, visitors are directed to the memorial garden where they are offered a direct route north, that then weaves through the site via various loops and returns—a metaphor for Tubman’s willingness to return to the region.