San Francisco Museum of Contemporary Art has released the initial pictures of Snøhetta’s near-full extension building displaying its striated facade and atrium.

First images of Snøhetta's SFMOMA expansion

The 235,000-square-foot (21,832 square metres) addition sits behind the institution’s Postmodern Mario Botta-made residence and will a lot more than double the museum’s footprint.

First images of Snøhetta's SFMOMA expansion

The new building’s distinctive facade is produced of fiberglass-reinforced polymer panels punctuated by horizontal band windows. Its kind contrasts with Botta’s patterned masonry and regular geometries.

First images of Snøhetta's SFMOMA expansion

“It truly is like getting a dance spouse,” Snøhetta founder Craig Dykers told Dezeen. “You never want to be specifically like them, as you’ll phase on every other’s feet all the time. A good dance partner is a person who has their own character and can move freely with each other with you.”

First images of Snøhetta's SFMOMA expansion

The rippled surface of the panels was inspired by San Francisco’s foggy weather and surrounding waters, in accordance to the architects.


Relevant story: San Francisco Museum of Modern Art expansion breaks ground


The ten-storey museum building includes occasions spaces, a flexible theatre, schooling and conservation centres, a library and archives, administrative offices, and one hundred,000-square-feet (9,290 square metres) of galleries distributed over five floors in the middle of the developing.

First images of Snøhetta's SFMOMA expansion

The free admission, glass-fronted ground floor gallery will open with a presentation of monumental sculptures by Richard Serra.

First images of Snøhetta's SFMOMA expansion

The facility will also include an outside sculpture backyard with a living wall with 16,000 plants, such as numerous native species.

In 2013, the architects exposed the layout for a monumental staircase that will hyperlink the Botta building with the new addition.

First images of Snøhetta's SFMOMA expansion

The Mario Botta creating opened in 1995 and is considered a late and controversial example of Postmodernism.

Dykers defended the merits of the earlier building.  “It was a meteorite landing on the internet site. It did what it required to do,” he explained.

Botta advised Dezeen the style for the new creating resembled a “mute wall, an enlarged wardrobe.” He additional, “I hope the achieved work will be far better and demonstrate me wrong.”

First images of Snøhetta's SFMOMA expansion

The museum also announced an official opening date of May possibly 14, 2016. Snøhetta was chosen for the project in 2010, beating Adjaye Associates, Diller Scofidio + Renfro, and Foster + Partners. The project broke ground in Could 2013.

Snøhetta is currently doing work on a variety of tasks in the West Coast including a new public market building in Portland, Oregon and a a river walk in Willamette Falls, Oregon.

Dezeen

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