Rising to a height of 56 meters, Gehry’s design is formed of a concrete core with a steel frame, glass boxes and shining aluminium panels are stacked around this in an irregular formation above a circular glass atrium. The tower will house a variety of different programs, including research facilities, workshop and seminar rooms, and artist studios.
The complex is located in the immediate vicinity of monuments and remains inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List. The Parc des Ateliers functions as a cultural platform presenting the different activities of the Luma Foundation. Luma Arles includes a resource center designed by architect Frank Gehry; several industrial buildings, five of which have been restored by New York-based Selldorf Architects; and a public park designed by Belgian landscape architect Bas Smets.
Maja Hoffmann has contributed €150 million to the project, through her Luma Foundation, set up to support independent artists. The pharmaceutical heiress to the Hoffmann-La Roche fortune grew up in Arles and continues her family's patronage of the city.
Gehry has had a reputation as the go-to architect for rejuvenation projects since his Guggenheim Museum Bilbao opened in Spain in 1997, and coined the term "the Bilbao effect".
Among the recent projects produced by the Luma Foundation, Luma Arles presented: PROVEN JEAN: Best Days Architect (2017-2018); the exhibition Annie Leibovitz - The Early Years: 1970-1983 (2017), the first expression of the Living Archives Program of the Luma Foundation; Arthur Jafa: Love is the Message, the Message is Death (2017); but also a series of collaborations with a diversity of artists launched six years ago in the fields of artistic production, film and dance, including SYSTEMATICALLY OPEN? New forms of production of the contemporary image (2016); Jordan Wolfson: Colored Sculpture (2016); Imponderable: The Archives of Tony Oursler (2015); Frank Gehry: The Chronicles of Solaris (2014); Wolfgang Tillmans: Neue Welt (2013); Towards the moon through the beach (2012); Doug Aitken: Altered Earth (2012); How Soon is Now (2010) and Curating Symposiums after Globalization: Road Maps for the Present (2017), How Institutions Think (2016); The Flood of Rights (2013) and The Human Snapshot (2011).