246 Pages 138 Color & 38 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

246 Pages 138 Color & 38 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

246 Pages 138 Color & 38 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

New Museum Design provides a critical and compelling selective survey of contemporary international museum design since 2010. It provides an accessible and analytic review of the architectural landscape of museum and gallery design in the 2010s. The book comprises twelve case study museum and gallery projects from across Europe, Asia, North America, Africa, the Middle East and Australia. Each... Read more

Acknowledgements

List of Illustrations

new Museum Design

Part 1: Re-Place

Chapter 1. Messner Mountain Museum (MMM) Corones

Chapter 2. Turner Contemporary

Chapter 3. China Academy of Art’s Folk Art Museum

Part 2: Re-Use

Chapter 4. Western Australia Museum Boola Bardip

Chapter 5. Zeitz MOCCA

Chapter 6. Tirpitz Museum

Part 3: Re-Present

Chapter 7. Louvre-Lens

Chapter 8. National Museum of African American History and Culture

Chapter 9. The Palestinian Museum

Part 4: Re-Imagine

Chapter 10. The Ashmolean Museum of Art and Archeology

Chapter 11. Rijksmuseum refurbishment

Chapter 12. James-Simon-Galerie

Index

 

Biography

Laura Hourston Hanks is Associate Professor in the Department of Architecture and Built Environment at the University of Nottingham, where she teaches across the Department and is a member of the Architecture, Culture and Tectonics Research Group. She graduated in Architecture from the University of Liverpool in 1995 and gained her doctorate in Architectural History and Theory from the University of Edinburgh in 2002. Laura’s research interests coalesce around contemporary museum and exhibition design, and her key publications in this field include the monograph Museum Builders II (2004), the co-edited volume Museum Making: Narratives, Architectures, Exhibitions (Macleod, Hanks and Hale, 2012), and chapters in Architecture and the Canadian Fabric (Hourston Hanks, 2011), and The Future of Museum and Gallery Design (2018).  Laura’s related research extends into the architectural expression of identities, issues of narrative space and place making, and collaborative digital heritage projects such as the recent creation of a VR experience and AR-enabled app of Lincoln Cathedral (Queen’s University Belfast, Hot Knife Digital Media).