To know more about the Guggenheim’s design documents and project, and the decisions chosee to rised, read the original article by Ashley Mendelsohn on the Guggenheim blog here.
In a recent research on Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum was discoverd that the iconic spiral form remained primarily unchanged, but a close reading of documents in the Guggenheim Museum Archives sheds additional light on an array of obscure details that were designed out over time to accommodate budgetary, programmatic, and structural needs and constraints.
In a recent Goggenheim blog post, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum explores unrealized design details from Frank Lloyd Wright’s master building in the Big Apple, New York, based on blueprints and drawings from the museum’s archives. From large-scale questions of form to material choices, the sixteen-year period between the commissioning of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in 1943 and its 1959 opening saw many design changes. Most notable of these revisions were the circulation paths drawn by Wright in the 1953 blueprints that include a steeper circular ramp "Quick Ramp", —in addition to the Grand Ramp, that all Guggenheim visitors know well, that would allow for expedited access to the floors. Though replaced later with a triangular staircase, the "Quick Ramp" demonstrates Wright’s exploration of overlapping geometries.
This research sheds additional discoveries Wright’s "Index of Surface Finishes" drawing shows us a desire to have the ramps in cork, but due to financial and maintenance concerns it was ultimately completed in terrazzo—the material used in the rest of the museum. Thogether with these blueprints and drawings from the museum’s archives also there are photographs of the physical model made in 1945 to help the public visualize the design. Though the dome pattern changed, the model is clear in its use of section to show Wright’s vision of fluidity and light that remains today.
To know more about the Guggenheim’s design documents and project, and the decisions chosee to rised, read the original article by Ashley Mendelsohn on the Guggenheim blog here.
More information
Published on:
June 10, 2017
Cite: "Frank Lloyd Wright's blueprints of the Guggenheim sheds additional ideas changed over the construction process" METALOCUS.
Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/frank-lloyd-wrights-blueprints-guggenheim-sheds-additional-ideas-changed-over-construction-process>
ISSN 1139-6415
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