The New Burchfield-Penney

The New Burchfield-Penney

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Buffalo Rising was granted an exclusive peek into the new Burchfield-Penney Art Center. This part of Buffalo State College will be a welcome standout in the triad of museums in what is known as the Museum District, neighboring the Albright-Knox and the Buffalo Historical Society.

The first Buffalo museum to be built in 100 years is coming onto the scene with a commanding presence. Though there are a lot of details still to be resolved, most immediately having to do with wrapping up the capital campaign through additional private funding and naming rights, the new BPAC facility, designed by Guggenheim-expansion architects, Gwathmey and Siegel, and under construction by LPCiminelli, Inc., has three main objectives according to Ted Pietrzak, Director.

"We want to be a museum where art is paramount, a place for people--with a thought to their needs--and a place that will wow its visitors," Pietrzak said. To those ends, the 84, 000 square foot structure will be beautifully built-out with stylish elements that include covering the exterior in zinc, cast stone and manganese-glazed brick. Inside, terrazzo and maple flooring will dominate the public space. Radiant floors will be used in the galleries, where lighting grids can be raised and lowered to create the appropriate ceiling heights for the art. There will also be a café and lounge area with high-end food and drink. "We want people to hang out and feel comfortable," Pietrzak said. "There will be tables outside for sitting among the outdoor sculptures, lounging and people-watching."

The museum will be outfitted with three bays for diverse education programs, as well as a high-tech auditorium where staff and community will work together to make the BPAC a forum for interactive "art and ideas" displays. Collection study spaces and art classrooms will offer programs for audiences from pre-K to adult. "We learned from our travels to Oberlin and Williams Colleges and Cornell University--who have museums that are attached to schools--how we can best fill our mission. We learned from MOMA about lighting systems and floor treatments. The concept of a visitor experience where the visitor sees everything in the gallery without retracing their steps replicates the original Guggenheim," Pietrzak said. Stunning spaces include the feature gallery, which will be 147 feet by 48 feet and have 28-foot-high ceilings.

The most visually "different" element from the outside of the building includes zinc panels that will cover the long, curved wall on Elmwood Avenue. The zinc is a “green building” material that will age to a distinctive patina over time. The Burchfield Rotunda will be the building’s iconic element, clad in cast stone that will flow into the interior of the building. Inside, this honorific space dedicated to Charles E. Burchfield follows his wishes for a round gallery. It will show the changes of season as seen through his paintings within, and the lighting will be layered so as to replicate a skylight. The Rotunda's upper floor, attached to the main reception hall, will be available to rent for parties and receptions. It will be, as Pietrzak said, a great place to hang out, observe and enjoy a drink, especially because it joins a glass wall that overlooks the reception area.

"The auditorium will be an intimate space with seating for 156, where we hope to host poetry readings, music recitals, lectures, films and video presentations," Pietrzak said. The auditorium will have special acoustic panels, a projection booth, built-in recording capabilities, and a stage that measures 20 feet deep, by 30 feet wide.

DSC_0053.JPG

"An 80-foot-long community gallery will continue our program, working with various non-for-profit community groups in an ongoing rotation of artworks created by them," Pietrzak said.

There will also be an art conservation area, where restoration being done on artworks will be viewable to the public through a window. Students of the college will be able to work along with experts, restoring art and paper artifacts, such as watercolors, prints, books, and manuscripts. The room will be outfitted with necessary tools of the trade, including vacuum tables and microscopes. Art storage areas will be equipped with high-density storage systems on rails, ultra sensitive climate-controlled equipment and gaseous, rather then water-based, fire suppression systems. Pietrzak hopes that the conservationists' services will be available to the general public.

With a minimum of visual pollution (switches and sensors), the gallery will have a lot of wall space and windows, with northern and southern exposure and controllable light. The light can be cut down to zero depending on the nature of the medium being displayed. The 28-foot-high windows in the galleries will have electronically controlled curtains. Every inch of the new BPAC is being used efficiently, and with the public in mind.

There is going to be an opportunity for artists to vie for the honor of creating a major artwork for the BPAC's Elmwood side and another at the entrance. And lest one thinks the honor is the only reward, there is $140K available for the two sculptures. To those interested artists out there: This is a paid gig. And to those of you who have the means and would like to be part of history, donations are still being sought to bring the museum to its $34M goal.

The grand opening will take place next summer. "We're a few weeks behind right now, but we plan to open on June 11th, 2008 for 31 hours straight. People should get their memberships now, because they're going up soon."

Membership:
$10 Students
$30 Individual
$45 Family

burchfield-penney.org

Editors Note: The BPM piece that appears in this month's BRM is the unedited, marked-up, very bad version of this story, containing random words and characters. In short, it is an editor's nightmare. Thank you for reading this instead. -ECB

Rock Harbor

What Others Have To Say

  1. EricOak

    4 ratings12345
    Sep 9th 2007, 14:19

    I had to laugh when I read the phrase "with the public in mind." Whether one likes the design or not, the Burchfield-Penney was completely and totally anti-public from start tio finish in their handling of this project.

  2. waterboy716

    4 ratings12345
    Sep 9th 2007, 15:04

    o, i can't resist.

    'totally anti-public from start to finish'

    does that have something to do with the fact that the entire process took no time at all?

  3. hamp

    4 ratings12345
    Sep 9th 2007, 16:47

    I find this museum about as interesting as a shopping mall. The architects have come up with something that is neither original nor exciting. The BP can PR this thing all they want, but it's a mediocre building on a very prominent site. I won't even get into the blank wall on Elmwood. Check out the architect's website. Zinc panels and manganese brick seems to be as good as they get. And that's not good enough for this location, in this city.

  4. doc

    0 ratings12345
    Sep 9th 2007, 19:18

    Sorry you feel that way hamp. You'd probably be happier if the designers stuck a couple of Corinthian-capped columns out front. Travel to some other cities to see their latest museums. St. Louis and Reno, specifically. They both radically pale by comparison.

  5. davvid

    1 ratings12345
    Sep 9th 2007, 20:43

    The new B-P will probably not get published in any Design magazines, text books or the NY Times. Still, the design is not bad. I'm glad that its modern at least.

  6. hamp

    1 ratings12345
    Sep 9th 2007, 21:13

    Did we really have to have a design that is "not bad". Here was a project with lots of money, a great site, and great art. Unfortunately there was no vision, and no leadership. From the client or the architect. I think a great modern building would have been great here. The new art museum at Washington University in St. Louis (where I studied) is just as bad as BP (if not worse). It totally ignores the existing urban context, and turns its back on the community.

  7. Hospitable

    0 ratings12345
    Sep 9th 2007, 21:38

    New museum...more complainers...I'd of left it unbuilt just to punish the crybabies.

  8. EricOak

    1 ratings12345
    Sep 9th 2007, 22:46

    "Not bad" seems to be what people here want to accept, and places like the B-P seem happy to oblige this tolerance for the mediocre. It's not the street-shunning, bleak exterior of this design that's most dismaying; it's the way it was handled. We may or may not have had a more enlightened design, but we could have had a fair and proper airing. But it was Old Buffalo all the way with this one, and that's not easy for me to say.

  9. hamp

    0 ratings12345
    Sep 9th 2007, 23:03

    I don't believe this is a "Buffalo" thing. Let's not beat ourselves up over this. Every city has lot's of mediocre buildings. It's the missed opportunity here that really is upsetting. Also, there is no defense for the lack of community process. BP didn't want the community involved in spite of what they will say publicly.

  10. 300miles

    1 ratings12345
    Sep 9th 2007, 23:32

    I love the design. Can't wait to see it completed.

  11. chris69

    1 ratings12345
    Sep 10th 2007, 00:01

    In a city that markets itself for architectual excellence and diversity of design....this building and its patrons are embarrassments to the art community and to the city...just the majority of Buffalo States 1970s Ape City.

  12. TownLine

    0 ratings12345
    Sep 10th 2007, 04:29

    I feel the exterior design and materials are horrendous. Pretty much exactly what I expected when I learned Gwathmey and Siegel were the architects. Some of the worst architects out there when it comes to adapting to the exterior context - and that does not mean it has to resemble neighboring buildings or can't be modern. They just have a huge track record of designing buildings that turn their backs on everything around it.

    However, I had a chance to tour the inside, and I have to say, its absolutely fantastic on the interior. The program of the spaces and the flow of the building really blew me away. This is going to be a MAJOR attraction for the city. Between this gallery and the Knox, Buffalo is going to have some of the finest gallery space in the US. Additionally, the activities and functionality planned for the museum is going to engage the community like no other cultural in the region.

    We have a fantastic asset about to open on our hands, its just regrettable that they completely missed the boat in creating a positive and progressive visual image for themselves.

  13. crc

    0 ratings12345
    Sep 10th 2007, 08:18

    Right on hamp. That wall! I think the same thing each time I walk by that building. What's with the blank wall?!?

    Public-involved projects may take longer, but at least we have nobody to blame once they're done! This thing is ugly. And what's taking so long to put it up?

  14. davvid

    1 ratings12345
    Sep 10th 2007, 09:49

    I agree that the architect and the design could have been alot better. But that would not have come out of a more public and transparent selection process. These kinds of decisions should be made by an informed few. Toshiko Mori wasn't chosen by the public to design the Martin House Visitors' Center. She was chosen by an expert panel from a short list of invited firms that competed for the project.

    If we would have had a similar process for the B-P building--i think we would have found a better architect with better ideas.

    These kinds of competitions are also more effective at marketing a new cultural attraction. A design competition could be conducted in cooperation with magazine editors or architecture critics. This kind of process immediately makes the building more culturally relevant.

    In today's NY Times there is a large article about the Barnes Museum in Philidelphia and their decision to hire architects Todd Williams and Billie Tsien. This doesn't just ensure a good building but it means publicity and cultural relevance.

  15. hamp

    1 ratings12345
    Sep 10th 2007, 12:15

    I have no idea how the BP architects were selected. Their website lists other projects for the State University of New York, including the Fine Arts Center at UB. These guys most likely have strong political connections in Albany. And that's why they were chosen. Not because they were the best.

  16. RPreskop

    1 ratings12345
    Sep 10th 2007, 19:27

    The new Burchfield- Penney Art Musuem will be an outstanding work of cutting edge modern architecture when it is completed. I am getting sick and damned tired of you know-it-all architecture critics who continue to have a deep seated narrow-minded hatred towards this fine, modern new musuem. The design will greatly enhance the physical appearence of the Elmwood-Rockwell intersection and help bring Buffalo's cityscape into the 21st century. You architecture critics don't know your ass from a hole in the ground. You all want to be obstructionists because you are all scared to death of new ideas, new designs, and progress in general. It is because of narrow-minded, backward attitudes expressed by hamp, Chris69, and others, that Buffalo continues to remain in a state of urban decline. All you jokers should do the rest of us Buffalonians a long overdue favor and move to North Tonawanda.

  17. davvid

    0 ratings12345
    Sep 10th 2007, 19:57

    If the Albright-Knox ever expands I think its a safe bet that they will employ either an already influential architect or an emerging one. Keep hope alive.

  18. chris69

    0 ratings12345
    Sep 10th 2007, 20:25

    David, the only way the Albright Knox could do that would be to build an entirely knew building in a new location such as the waterfront....perhaps as Milwaukee did with an outer harbor museum by Calatrava but rumor has it that the expansion at the Albright Knox will be additional underground space....in essence their going to expand their basement.

    Expanding a basement will neither be bold nor creative nor allow the potential for bold or creative

    The Albright Knox turned their back on their classical collection, the Burchfield Penny turned their back to Elmwood Ave and the now the Albright Knox instead of using their betrayal of the classsical arts to finance a new building....they will most likely expand their basement (what better metaphor can their be for a liberal elitist art community with their head up their arse than a cavernous underground brown tunnel as if one is descending into a large intestine......to which the large blank brown wall at the B-P seem to emulate quite well too!

  19. hamp

    0 ratings12345
    Sep 10th 2007, 21:31

    Don't be so sure about the Knox basement plan. They have plenty of room on the Elmwood side to do a great addition. And I think that is what will be coming in the future.

  20. DanielSack

    0 ratings12345
    Sep 10th 2007, 22:28

    I don't have high hopes for a wonderful addition to the Albright Knox. The A-K director is already on record exclaiming the beauty of the new Burchfield-Penney design.

    From the Buffalo News 2/15/2006, "Louis Grachos, director of the Albright-Knox Art Gallery across the street, expressed enthusiasm for the building's design "I love it. It's an elegant building. That beautiful curve will give the building tremendous presence as you approach it in all directions," Grachos said. "It's going to glisten and over time develop a patina. I think it will be a very, very nice addition."

  21. PrincetonElms

    0 ratings12345
    Sep 10th 2007, 22:34

    Some people might think that a gasometer (look it up, Messkop) is "cutting edge!" ... but it's strictly 1895 Industrial.

  22. PrincetonElms

    0 ratings12345
    Sep 11th 2007, 01:09

    "First museum to be built in 100 years"

    When do you think the Museum of Science was built ?

  23. chris69

    0 ratings12345
    Sep 11th 2007, 03:50

    I agree Daniel...if the AK does anything above ground...it will be like the Castellani and the B-P....a large blank wall but I believe that I heard they were going underground.

    I think its very disappointing that they wont do a separate museum on the waterfront with something really bold.

    I picture a museum within a museum......art museums need large blank walls and little sunlight because sunlight can damage and age artwork.....but wouldnt it be incredible if an architect created a glass sculptured Gehry extrior and a blank walled interior.

  24. doc

    0 ratings12345
    Sep 11th 2007, 10:35

    Wait until the exterior is complete. I think there will be a big change of heart. Let's not lose sight of the fact that this is a multi-purpose facility for world-class art and world-class art education. As far as I'm concerned the architects take very much into consideration the academic context and most definitely consider the client in this development. How much of the client do you think our beloved F.L. Wright took into consideration?

  25. Zak

    0 ratings12345
    Sep 11th 2007, 10:42

    Why are all the detailed views of the new Burchfield-Penny Art Museum found on the gwathmey-siegal.com website identified as "Crocker Art Museum - Addition and Renovation"?

  26. davvid

    0 ratings12345
    Sep 11th 2007, 14:31

    Sack, just because Grachos says nice things about his neighbors doesn't mean that he doesn't have a higher standard for his own institution.

    hmmm...Daniel Libeskind will be lecturing at the Albright on October 14th.

  27. 300miles

    0 ratings12345
    Sep 11th 2007, 20:16

    It would be an interesting comparison to look at the people in this thread that sit back and blast the new gallery and say it's all wrong and compare them with the people in the Gates Circle condo thread who villify others that don't like that tower. I would bet that they are the same people.

    If you think you should have the right to change the design of this museum because of your own personal tastes, then you can't criticize those that want the tower redesigned for the same reasons.

    Otherwise, take your own medicine, and deal with the design. You're not going to like everything that gets built

  28. EricOak

    1 ratings12345
    Sep 12th 2007, 00:19

    The new BP is a lazy, hum drum design. The Gates Circle Tower is a boilerplate stack of glass. A wave of mediocrity rises in a city of once spacious, refined architecture. Our standards have plummeted.

  29. chris69

    0 ratings12345
    Sep 12th 2007, 01:15

    I know alot of people that hate the B-P but are find with the Gates Circle. The gates circle isnt the compagnile or 800West Ferry but its no blue whale either. I think that people expect different standards for one in a lifetime museums than they do for residential towers and homes. SoI think your opinion is only half correct.

  30. 300miles

    0 ratings12345
    Sep 12th 2007, 03:12

    Victorian Homes were considered "hum drum" when everybody else on the block had the same thing. We need to appreciate our past architectural history while stepping into the 21st century. It's 2007. This is modern architecture. We should build designs that reflect the age we live in, not just continually mimic the past.

    Some people need to separate out their personal preferences from what is truly good or bad architecture. Your personal preferences are irrelevent.

  31. EricOak

    0 ratings12345
    Sep 12th 2007, 10:07

    It's not a question of modern versus old; it's a question of vision, taste, and quality. I like a lot of powerful modern design--this tower is not it. And the BP is a lazy building on the exterior. Buffalo deserves better modern design than this and we should be disappointed not thrilled when we're served up leftover design.

  32. davvid

    0 ratings12345
    Sep 12th 2007, 16:30

    We should have better, more inspired designs in everything from our art museums to our water towers. I think one of the reasons that we don't is cost. I think another major reason is that many folks in Buffalo have no idea of how to access the best available practices. Its not enough to just say "we deserve better" when many don't even know what "better" looks and feels like. This is the only way that I can understand why anyone would hire someone like Carl Frizlin or insist on rebuilding old Frank Lloyd Wright ideas. There are plenty of amazing young or emerging architecture firms out there that are willing to do alot of work to get their designs realized. We first need to know this talent exists and second we need to draw them to our city.

  33. RPreskop

    1 ratings12345
    Sep 12th 2007, 19:49

    I wish some of you guys would open up your minds and stop being so critical of the new Burchfield-Penney museum building. It is definately not a lazy building. It is a refreshing, cutting edge, high quality modern design that will greatly enhance the Elmwood-Rockwell intersection. It will be a unique, interesting looking structure when completed. Let them complete this building first before passing judgment on it.

  34. impressingagent

    0 ratings12345
    Sep 13th 2007, 03:10

    i don't have too many complaints about the building. Buffalo state has its art program and i think whatever they could build will be a huge benefit for the program. Some of the window placement is right on and the rest of the building is an odd, but very stately shape. I don't know if they will have the dog fighting inside or out? none the less, this is a school building, for most likely academic representational art. go figure!

    of course i'm just kidding with what its going to be about. I just hope they install sprinklers for the lawn and have contests.

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