Archive by Category 'Ashton Raggatt McDougall'

National Museum of Australia

The National Museum of Australia in Canberra celebrates the land, nation and people of Australia by exploring the key issues, events and people that have shaped Australia. Ashton Raggatt McDougall designed the National Museum of Australia and the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies in March 2001. This museum is an ambitious commentary on aspects of contemporary and historical Australian culture. The $155m competition brief proposed the incorporation of two new axes across the 11 hectare site, a peninsula projecting into Lake Burley Griffin in the heart of Canberra, Australia’s capital city.

National Museum of Australia5.jpgThe museum employs the metaphor of a Boolean string, a computer-generated mathematical guide. The string represents a tangling of these formalized aces; its contortions embrace the site, creating a continuous experience of land, water, space and building. Along and around this axis there is an exploration of the issues and themes which have made significant marks in the social history of the country. Through an extension of the ideas inherent in museology, the landscape of the entire site takes on a meaning well beyond the simple geographical place as a peninsula in an artificial lake.

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