Project Details
- Project Name
- Zeitz Museum of Contemporary Art Africa (MOCAA)
- Location
- South Africa
- Architect
- Heatherwick Studio
- Client/Owner
- V&A Waterfront
- Project Types
-
Cultural ,Entertainment
- Project Scope
- Interiors
- Size
- 102,257 sq. feet
- Year Completed
- 2017
- Shared by
- Symone Garvett
- Team
-
Simona Auteri
Ruggero Bruno Chialastri
Yao Jen Chuang
Francis Field
Sarah Gill
Xuanzhi Huang
Changyeob Lee
Julian Liang
Débora Mateo
Stefan Ritter
Luke Snow
Ondrej Tichý
Meera Yadave
Mat Cash
Stepan Martinovsky
- Project Status
- On the Boards/In Progress
The former grain silo also houses the Silo Hotel which is located at the top of the structure occupying six floors above the Zeitz MOCAA museum. The interior of the hotel is designed by Liz Biden.
Project Description
FROM THE ARCHITECTS:
The brief was to reinvent the historic Grain Silo at the V&A Waterfront in Cape Town, as a not-for-profit cultural institution housing the most significant collection of contemporary art from Africa and its diaspora.
Our first thoughts wrestled with the extraordinary physical facts of the building. There is no large open space within the densely packed tubes and it is not possible to experience these volumes from inside. Rather than strip out the evidence of the building’s industrial heritage, we wanted to find a way to celebrate it. We could either fight a building made of concrete tubes or enjoy its tube-iness.
Unlike many conversions of historic buildings which have grand spaces ready to be re-purposed, this building has none. The project became about imagining an interior carved from within an infrastructural object.
The solution we developed was to carve galleries and a central circulation space from the silos’ cellular concrete structure, creating a cathedral-like central atrium filled with light from a glass roof.
The other silo bins will be carved away above ground level to create gallery spaces for the Zeitz MOCAA permanent collection and international traveling exhibitions.
From the outside, the greatest visible change to the Silo’s monumental structure will be the addition of pillowed glazing panels, inserted into the existing geometry of the upper floors, which will bulge outward as if gently inflated. By night, this will transform the building into a glowing lantern or beacon in the harbor.