New Acropolis Museum
The 34,500 square-feet
But the problem appears when archaeologists uncovered an early Christian town at the site. A dilemma because it is important to keep the museum adjacent to the Acropolis as possible, but any area near the Acropolis is containing important archaeological ruins when excavated. And then it was decided to leave the archaeological sites where they are, and to build the museum above them. “The Parthenon was the highest point of culture and worship, the museum is a place that records those achievements. The museum will stage the work of that era while asserting a new identity.” says Tschumi.
His design climaxed with a glass structure which will one day house the Parthenon Marbles when the British government is finally surrendered to return those in its true posseser. The Greek Embassy in
Light
More than in the regularity of museum, the
Movement
The visitor’s circulation forms a three-dimension loop, affording an architectural promenade with a rich spatial experience extending from the archeological excavations to the Parthenon Marbles and back through the Roman period. It gives time journey sensation as dimension of architecture and of this museum in particular. With over 10,000 visitors daily, exploring the museum and examining the artifacts is conceived to be of prior clarity.
Tectonic and Programmatic
The museum’s first floor has an auditorium and lobby between which a wide ramp levels up to the second floor. Transparent sections in the ramp’s floor allow visitors to look carefully at the exposed archaeological remains below. Along the sides of the ramp and as freestanding installations there will be artifacts collected from the Sanctuary of the Nymphs, the Sanctuary of Asklepios, and somewhere on the slopes of the Acropolis, also there are temporary exhibition spaces, retail, and all support facilities.
The second is a large, double-height trapezoidal plate that holds the finds of the Archaic Period, from 800-500 B.C., in a 21,100 square feet area characterized by architectural columns. A mezzanine welcomes a bar and restaurant with views towards the Acropolis, and a multimedia auditorium, with a large terrace spanning northward offers panoramic views of the Acropolis and the city of
The third floor will be devoted to space anticipating the return of the treasures Elgin took, many which date back to the Parthenon’s beginning. It is a rectangular gallery, enclosed in glass to ensure the proper air and light controls for these objects from ancienity and a direct view of the Acropolis above, with the exact geometry and harmonious dimensions of the columned Parthenon, providing an appropiate context for understanding the accomplishments of the Parthenon complex itself.
The international competition was headed by the Organization for the Construction of the
“We asked, ‘How can we provide a building which is as representative to our contemporary sensibility and technology as the Parthenon was at its time,’ architecture is not about form, but about defining a goal or concept. There is no sentimentality in it. You cannot be intimidated,” said Tschumi.
















May 31st, 2007 at 3:00 am
[…] [extracts from Architectook] […]
September 21st, 2008 at 8:19 pm
The Parthenon was built at the initiative of Pericles under the general supervision of the sculptor Phidias