Project Details
- Project Name
- UC Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive
- Location
-
2155 Center Street
Berkeley ,United States
- Architect
- Diller Scofidio + Renfro
- Project Types
- Cultural
- Size
- 83,000 sq. feet
- Year Completed
- 2016
- Awards
- 2016 AIA New York Design Awards
- Shared by
- Hanley Wood Media
- Project Status
- Built
- Cost
- $112,000,000
On June 29, 2015, the University of California, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive (BAM/PFA) announced that it will open at its new location on Jan. 31, 2016. BAM/PFA closed in its former building, designed by Mario Ciampi with Richard L. Jorasch and Ronald E. Wagner, in December 2014.
Read ARCHITECT's coverage of BAM/PFA.
Project Description
At the boundary between the City of Berkeley and the historic University campus, the new BAM/PFA is a bridge institution, balancing civic and university interests, aligning its location with its mission as a nexus of aesthetic experience and critical discourse for the university and the community. The reuse of an existing 1939 Press Building to house galleries, a small theater, art-making lab, and other amenities sliced by a new structure to house a film theater, library, study center, and café offers an opportunity to create dynamic intersections across time-periods and styles as well as among disciplines and programs. The soft, supple body of the new structure, draped between adjacent orthogonal buildings and snagged on their sharp corners, creates a dramatic public spine. Through a language of adaptive reuse, strategic excavation and surgical addition, the existing Press Building will house eight galleries of varying sizes and characteristics. The form of the Osher Theater reinterprets 1930's Streamline Moderne style of the Press Building in a contemporary language of ruled surfaces and precision-formed stainless steel. The sleek outer body is lined by a striated interior; the warm-colored sinews wrap the inside of the silvery shell. At the Addison Street end, the new structure hovers above an open excavation, exposing the library and works on paper study center to the public. The other end of the new form is counterbalanced by a café dramatically cantilevered over Center Street.—DS+R