New Kengo Kuma-designed museum makes beautiful use of wood

Does a new art museum exist if it’s not designed by a starchitect? Let’s take stock: The Guggenheim Bilbao has Frank Gehry; the Whitney has Renzo Piano; the Louvre Abu Dhabi has Jean Nouvel; and now, the newly opened Odunpazari Modern Museum (OMM) comes courtesy of Kengo Kuma and Associates.

Situated in the center of Eskişehir, Turkey, the OMM is a gorgeously modern structure among the city’s historic Ottoman-style architecture. The facade is a series of interlocking timber boxes that look like a high-design Jenga set.

NAARO

“We were deeply inspired by the history, culture, people and streetscape of Odunpazari,” said Yuki Ikeguchi, a partner at KKAA. “We wanted the building to resonate on many levels.”

NAARO

Like the firm’s work on the V&A Dundee, the OMM plays with levels and angles, with the timber boxes rotated so they create a fortress of wood. Inside, the 48,437-square-foot museum will house more than 1,000 pieces of contemporary art. One of the building’s most striking interior features is a central atrium where the timber boxes meet, creating a rotating channel of light and wood that’s almost an art piece unto itself.

This was originally posted on Curbed by Liz Stinson.

More Stories
Eastside Windermere Foundation Receives Bellevue Lifespring Wings Award