Following an international competition win in 2003, Gareth Hoskins Architects have completed the £47M redevelopment of the National
Museum of Scotland. Set within the World Heritage Listed site of
Edinburgh's Historic Old Town, the Museum brings together a world
class collection of artefacts from world cultures, natural history,
science and technology and art and design. The project is the most
comprehensive redevelopment of the Museum's complex of buildings and
displays since it first opened in 1866.
GHA worked with National Museums to develop a 15 year masterplan to
guide the redevelopment of the Museum. Alongside the refurbishment of
the main A listed Victorian building, the masterplan introduced a
series of new external and internal architectural spaces and
alterations. These major architectural interventions connect the
Museum with the surrounding City via new public spaces and entrances
carved into the rusticated sandstone plinth of the original building.
The previously hidden undercroft to the building has been completely
reconfigured and opened up to create much needed back of house spaces
and a dramatic new public arrival hall within the atmospheric stone
vaults of the complex's substructure. Visitors ascend via new stairs
and lifts to the delicate cast iron structure of the original central
atrium which has been reinstated as the main introductory gallery.
Large scale objects re-inhabit this vast 6 storey volume and with new
full height displays animate the space and introduce the collections
housed in the galleries beyond. A sequence of new voids and stairs
create a clear promenade through the Museum drawing visitors up
through the levels of redisplayed galleries to the new special
exhibitions gallery and learning centre and improve connections with
Benson & Forsyth's 1999 extension.
Within its first month of reopening to the public, the Museum has
attracted over ½ a million visitors, far exceeding anticipated visitor
targets.
The National Museum of Scotland is the latest in a succession of
museums and cultural buildings the practice has worked on, including
the Victoria & Albert Museum's Architecture Galleries, Culloden
Battlefield Visitor Centre, Court Barn Museum in Chipping Campden and
Durham's Light Infantry Museum.
Project: Gareth Hoskins Architects
Client: National Museums Scotland
Value: £47.4m
Completion: 2011
National Museum of Scotland Redevelopment
Set within the World Heritage Listed site of Edinburgh's Historic Old Town, the Museum was recently completed by Gareth Hoskins Architects.
View Article details
- 08 November 2011
- Edinburgh
