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As a new home for the spectacular natural history collections of Tel Aviv University, the building combines exhibition spaces and research activities. The collections, which were never before on display, were placed in a large wooden chest - a treasure box of valuable specimens of flora and fauna. The building enfolds the box and offers it to the public as an enigmatic object, invited to be explored. The box itself, which aspires to be of timeless qualities, concurrently ancient and futuristic, is covered with industrial wooden panels that highly insulate the collections and keep them under strict climate control
The building is located at the entrance to the Botanical Gardens of Tel Aviv University, creating a new entryway for them and suggesting a combined visit to the gardens and to the museum. Floating above the ground, the building exposes the gardens and ‘pulls’ them to the street.
The exhibition of the museum spans across a diverse path which is in part exposed to daylight in ramps that open to the main atrium, and in part positioned within darker spaces. The ramps are wide and with minimal slope, allowing visitors, including those with disabilities, to walk up to the treasure box while experiencing the different spaces of the building. The visit ends on the rooftop terrace, overlooking the botanical gardens, from which visitors can go directly down to a public square and enter the gardens.
Placed in the upper levels, the research laboratories give researchers access to the entire collections. They are separated from visitors with independent circulation paths. However, within the treasure box, at the peak of the museum path, visitors and researchers are exposed to one another in series of choreographed encounters.
Area above ground: 10,000 sqm
Underground parking: 16,000 sqm
Architecture
Kimmel Eshkolot Architects
Design team : Michal Kimmel Eshkolot , Etan Kimmel, Ilan Carmi,
Limor Amrani
Architect in charge: Limor Amrani
Photographer: Amit Geron
Client:
Tel Aviv University
Structural engineering
S.BEN-ABRAHAM Engineering
Construction manager
E.D. Rahat Engineering Coordination and Management Ltd.
Eliezer Rahat, Daniel Rahat
Contractors :
Rom-Geves, Shitufit
Landscape architecture:
Braudo Maoz
Lighting Design:
Shiri Ziv
view from west
east facade
east facade
outdoor amphitheatre
south facade
the collection chest
entrance
outdoor entrance
outdoor exhibition
outdoor garden
entrance lobby
entrance lobby
entrance lobby
exhibition ramp
1st floor gallery
the atrium
1st floor gallery
the atrium
the atrium
entrance
view from noorth
section
ground floor
1st floor
2nd floor
3rd floor
4th floor
5th floor
Circulation scheme
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获奖者Kimmel Eshkolot Arch
Kimmel Eshkolot Architects is an Israeli architecture practice, founded in Tel Aviv, Israel in 1986, by Etan Kimmel and Michal Kimmel Eshkolot. In their first years of practice, they were involved in the preservation and rehabilitation of Neve Tzedek, the historical neighborhood of Tel Aviv. In 1993 they were awarded the Rokach prize for architecture for their projects in Neve Zedek. In the same year Ilan Carmi joined the practice, and became associate in 1997. Kimmel Eshkolot is often invited to participate in short-list competitions. This has led to many projects and awards, such as the following: Davidson Museum, Jerusalem (1998) Beth Halochem in Beer Sheva (2002) Steinhardt Building in Tel Aviv University (2009) Ramot Campus in Beer Sheva (2010) Israeli government compound expansion, Jerusalem (2010) Netanya City Hall Tower (2011) Forum Exhibition Halls Building in the “Shuk Sitonay” project, Tel Aviv (2012) Check-Point Building in Tel Aviv University (2013) How we work: We strongly believe in team work and in a true dialogue both with our clients, and with different specialists, from the preliminary stages of the design. Our work involves digital and physical 3D modeling, rethinking the design throughout the process with iterations. As architects we have a great environmental responsibility, and thus sustainability is a key notion in our thinking. In each project we search for the hints and opportunities to generate the best project possible. We want the project to be true to its essence, rich in its complexity and yet simple. In this way we attempt to expand the meaning of our architecture, through the program and with our clients’ ambitions. Throughout the years they won several national competitions for the design of high-profile public projects, such as the new expansion of the government compound (“Kiryat Hamemshala”) in Jerusalem, the Davidson Museum in the Archaeological Park near the Western Wall and the Memorial Center for Israeli military casualties in Mount Herzl. In 2011 they won the Rechter Prize for Architecture, considered to be the most prestigious award for architecture in Israel. They received the award for the design of a rehabilitation center in Be’er Sheva, in the south of Israel. This project was also selected for project of the year in the international competition of the magazine Israeli Architecture. The practice is currently involved in dozens of projects in different scales, both in Israel and in Europe.
历届文化空间设计获奖作品