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DEVELOPMENT PIPELINE: MUSEUMS/GALLERIES


CHRYSLER MUSEUM OF ART Norfolk, Virginia, USA


■ OPENING 2014


The Chrysler Museum of Art in Virginia has closed its main gallery ahead of a US$24m (£15.4m, €18m) revamp. A key component of the renova- tion, scheduled for completion in April 2014, is the replacement of outdated temperature control systems in order to conserve the museum’s collection. Two new wings, totalling 743sq m (8,000sq ft), will flank the museum’s entrance, adding to its current space of 19,510sq m (210,000sq ft). New facilities will include Wi-Fi access in every gallery, improved disability access and an expanded café open outside normal museum hours. During construction, the museum’s glass studio and Moses Myers House will remain open and the Norfolk His- tory Museum will be converted into a new gallery dedicated to American art. In the meantime, many of the mu- seum’s 30,000 pieces of art will be displayed at other galleries in Virginia.


www.chrysler.org Temperature control will be improved


Cleveland Museum of Natural History in University Circle is set for a US$125m (£80.4m, €93.6m) transformation. The project, which was previously halted during the 2008 expansion, will see the demolition of half of its existing facility on the west side of Wade Oval, and the addi- tion of two new glass exhibit wings and a crystalline lobby, designed by architect Curt Fentress of Denver, whose previous work


34 Attractions Handbook 2013–2014


Two new glass exhibit wings designed by architect Curt Fentress of Denver will be added


CLEVELAND MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY


Cleveland, Ohio, USA OPENING TBC


includes Denver’s international airport and the expansion of the museum of natural history in Raleigh, North Carolina. The Cleveland museum has no precise timetable for the project, but will break ground when it has raised 70 per cent of the construction cost of its expansion. Ongoing capital campaigns for the Cleve- land Museum of Art, the Cleveland Orches- tra and other institutions are attempting to raise hundreds of millions of dollars. Museum director Dr. Evalyn Gates said the project would boost science educa- tion in Cleveland by making the museum’s collections and research activities far more visible and dynamic than they are today.


www.universitycircle.org www.attractionshandbook.com


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