[L: New Museum (image source), R: American Folk Art Museum (image source)]
Each is obviously quite narrow, each is tucked to one side of the building, and each provides a distant vista of the floor from which one is descending. While SANAA's "unformed" and Tod & Billie's "formed" designs (more on this distinction in a later musing on the lecture) couldn't be more diverse, both offices acknowledge the appeal of each stair's secrecy, the fact one either comes upon it by surprise or by exploring and searching out the various spaces of the respective museum. So even though the white boxes of the New Museum are the polar opposite of the Folk Art Museum's "idiosyncratic and personal" galleries, they apparently do have something in common. It's hard to say if SANAA was influenced by the earlier work, or if -- more likely -- a combination of site restrictions, function, and other factors pointed to the design decision in each case. Both stairs (and museums) are worth searching out.
[This is the first of a series of posts about, and inspired by, the aforementioned lecture by Tod & Billie.]
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