#PUBLIC ARCHITECTURE PROJECTS
The Mint Museum
The Levine Center for the Arts in Charlotte, North Carolina is made up of four downtown venues that instill culture in a city better known for banking, finance and racing
One such component is the Mint Museum Uptown, which houses a collection of art, craft and design and international traveling exhibitions in a building designed by Boston's Machado and Silvetti Associates. The architects answered questions about the newest addition to the 75-year-old institution, which opened its doors last fall.
The request for qualifications lead to a short list of six domestic firms. The first interview was held in November 2005, after which the short list was reduced to only two contenders: Machado and Silvetti Associates with Clark Patterson Lee and Pei Cobb Freed of NYC with the Charlotte based office of Perkins and Will. The second interview took place in December 2005 and the competition winner was announced in January 2006. At that final interview we presented four sets of design ideas which were the basis of the design work that we started in February 2006.Can you describe your design process for the building?
The design process was particularly complex due to a number of unique reasons.
The City of Charlotte, in collaboration with Wachovia bank, had planned this very important site along Tryon Street (the main street in downtown Charlotte), as part of a cultural district including two other museums, a large theater, etc. This meant that the Bank, the City and the Museum were very much involved in the design process.
The site condition and unusual partitioning proved to be a challenge. A previously selected architect was already working on the loading dock and many levels of undergroung parking, a different architect was working on a residential tower to be built on top of the Mint Museum, thus traversing our assigned building space (this architect also designed the ground level commercial spaces under our building), and a third landscape architect was designing the plaza in front of the Mint Museum.
Our client (The Mint Museums) wanted to combine two collections, the Mint Museum of Craft and Design and The Mint Museum of Art. The goal was to merge the two into a new building while allowing each to retain a certain degree of identity and autonomy. This lead to complex discussions based on the notions of iconicity, branding, identity, "two in one", etc.How does the completed building compare to the project as designed? Were there any dramatic changes between the two and/or lessons learned during construction?
The building was built exactly as it was designed. We had an excellent building construction team and our intentions were well manifested within the taxing budget conditions to be met.
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How does the building compare to other projects in your office, be it the same or other building types?
As of now we have completed five art museums, yet all of them are radically different. Each institution has had its own budget and site resulting in drastically different buildings. Since we strive to make each building unique, this project does not compare to others done by us.
How does the building relate to contemporary architectural trends, be it sustainability, technology, etc.?
We make every effort to avoid trends and to produce timeless buildings. The Mint Museum is a contemporary building, very much of its time and the product of today's technologies.
Are there any new/upcoming projects in your office that this building’s design and construction has influenced?
For us work is a continuum and somehow a project begins were the previous one ended... form comes from form, or, more precisely, from our form.