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    Northern Star

    continued

    The need for an expansion fell in step with a desire to lure back dwindling tourist traffic. These factors, coupled with the city's lack of design drama, gave curator Jonaitis a strong case for proposing a powerful Alaskan landmark.

    Museum Renewal

    The program called for doubling the size of the museum — with a new lobby, gift shop, galleries, cafe, and auditorium — and for giving the international community something to talk about.

    "I had never visited Alaska," says Joan Soranno, project architect at the Minneapolis office of HGA. "When I did, I realized what a phenomenal place it is. You're surrounded by this incredible beauty and scale, and the weather is so violent. The light quality is phenomenal in summer — there's no darkness — and in winter there's very little light... but the glaciers really caught my fancy, so when we started conceptualizing the forms, that was the starting point."

    To come up with a worthy silhouette for the Fairbanks skyline, the architects worked primarily with physical models. Some, said Soranno, resembled ice, some mountains, but she resisted an overly literal approach. "I wanted to capture the spirit but in an abstract way that allows people their own interpretation. This is not an intellectual process. It's strictly working with form."

    They arrived at a striking design, and the building opened to the public in May 2006, graceful in its curvature, exuberant in the strength of its clean, jutting lines. As intended, no one can really pin down an analogy for the building's form, because every angle evokes something new.

    The architects originally wanted to use coated stainless steel for the facade, but maintenance and cost concerns led them to specify metal panels coated with white paint mixed with mica flakes. This coating lends the skin a gentle iridescence that interacts with the seasonally changing light conditions.

    Because both firms were used to extreme winters, they were familiar with necessities such as triple-insulated glass and snow guards. Unlike Minneapolis, however, Fairbanks is in a high seismic zone, so the architects worked with PDC Consulting Engineers to design structural joints that could accommodate movement during an earthquake.

    Museum on Exhibit

    Inside, the new building has literally engulfed the old. The architects built out from the existing exterior walls so the former building disappeared, but they kept the diagonal circulation and the original black-box gallery. Alongside this is a new auditorium and lobby.

    The aesthetic is as clean and graceful as the exterior, giving the exhibits — from oil paintings and ivory carvings to fur parkas — their deserved attention. The museum has been noted for its insistence that cultural arts and crafts are of equal importance to the "fine" arts; as a result, the exhibits are integrated under various themes and geographical regions.

    One acclaimed exhibit is a sound chamber by artist John Luther Adams that receives seismic and light-quality feedback from outposts across the state and transforms the data into a real-time sound and light display.

    These interpretations of the natural landscape are helped along by the museum's carefully placed glazing. On the second floor, in the new, elongated art gallery, one of these large windows — 28 feet (8.5 meters) long — treats visitors with views of the Tanana Flats and the Alaska Range.

    On the lower level are curatorial research offices and collection storage areas. As an active university facility, the museum maintains a major scientific component, including several sophisticated DNA and archaeology labs.

    To Soranno's disappointment, plans for the museum cafe had to be abandoned. "It dealt with the west side of the museum in an interesting way," she says, "bringing the east language over to the west. When it disappeared [from the program] it was sad because it enlivened that side really well. But otherwise [the museum expansion] very much turned out the way I had conceived of it in the earlier models." There is still a chance the cafe will be added in the future.

    Already the number of tourist drop-ins has grown significantly, and the museum has been popular with the local public. It had been made possible by a huge fundraising drive recruiting everyone from Girl Scout troops to wealthy patrons, and the entire state had been eager to see their efforts in built form.

    In the end, they liked what they saw. "People in Alaska consider it to be the most stunning piece of architecture in the state," says Jade Frank, of the Fairbanks tourism bureau. "It's caused quite a stir."

    This of course was the real test. To condense the spirit of a place into a single piece of architecture is challenge enough, but to spatially impress people who regularly see glaciers from their doorstep? That's quite the achievement.   >>>

    Discuss this article in the Architecture Forum...

    Jo Baker is a freelance design and travel writer based in Hong Kong and San Francisco. Publications she writes for include Time, The South China Morning Post, and Hinge Magazine.

     

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    University of Alaska's Museum of the North, in Fairbanks, expansion by HGA and GDM.
    Photo: Nic Lehoux Photography

    ArchWeek Image

    Expanses of triple-glazed windows provide views to the spectacular setting.
    Photo: Nic Lehoux Photography

    ArchWeek Image

    Museum glows at night.
    Photo: Nic Lehoux Photography

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    The former museum was relatively boxy.
    Photo: Barry McWayne/UA Museum of the North

    ArchWeek Image

    Site plan.
    Image: HGA

    ArchWeek Image

    Lower floor plan.
    Image: HGA

    ArchWeek Image

    Main floor plan.
    Image: HGA

    ArchWeek Image

    Upper floor plan.
    Image: HGA

     

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