PORTLAND, MAINE.- The
Portland Museum of Art (PMA), together with Dovetail Design Strategists, announced that LEVER Architecture (Portland, OR and Los Angeles, CA) has been selected to lead the design team for the PMAs $100 million campus expansion and unification project, The PMA Blueprint.
LEVER Architecture will now begin the process of designing a new museum wing, as well as improvements to unify the PMAs existing campus of four architecturally significant buildings located in the heart of Portland, Maine.
This is one of the most significant moments in the PMAs 140-year history, says Mark Bessire, the Judy and Leonard Lauder Director of the Portland Museum of Art. LEVER, and the team they have assembled, have demonstrated that they care deeply about our regions future, our unique arts culture, and the needs of our communities. They share our values of courage, equity, service, sustainability, and trust, and we cant wait to work with LEVER and our communities to imagine Maines next great landmark.
LEVER Architectures winning concept imagines the PMA campus unified through a stunning and sustainable building that connects directly to the PMAs Postmodern-style Charles Shipman Payson Building (1983), Beaux-arts style Lorenzo De Medici Sweat Memorial Galleries (1911), Federalist-style McLellan House (1801), and Greek revival Clapp House (1832.) The designproposed primarily from sustainable mass timber, one of LEVERs defining characteristicsreflects LEVERs understanding of the PMAs values and goals, as well as the history and future of Portland, of Maine, and of the region.
"The PMA's competition brief was a challenge to the very definition of what a museum is, says LEVER Principal, Chandra Robinson. It was a call to action to designers around the world to question what it means to truly design for people, for communities, and for a specific place in the world. We would not have been able to challenge the idea of a museum without conceptualizing a new model of inclusive participation. Our teams' perspectives on Wabanaki culture, community engagement, and universal accessibility were at the root of this design process."
LEVER envisions a new building at the site of 142 Free Street made from mass timber, terracotta, and glass, and includes nods to Maine communities, history, and culture. The curved roofline is designed to frame the sun as it rises and sets, in honor of Maines Wabanaki communities (Abenaki, Maliseet, Micmac, Passamaquoddy, and Penobscot Nations) and the land they call Wabanakik, or Dawnland. The timber used in LEVERs design speaks to the states lumber industry heritage while reimagining its future as a hallmark of environmental stewardship, much in the same way the PMAs other buildings embody their time and place and reflect other aspects of Maines history. Critically, mass timber is incredibly strong, durable, and sustainable, with an ability to sequester carbon. Other sustainable building materials and practices, such as geothermal energy, will be explored as the project moves into future phases.
"We are humbled to work with this visionary institution and create a new museum that truly embodies the mission of Art for All, Robinson continues. Maine's natural beauty and welcoming community have been such an inspiration to the team, and we cannot wait to create a new museum that takes a giant step into the future and brings us all to a time and place that celebrates how art and the human spirit are intertwined."
LEVER Architecture and their team of Simons Architects and Unknown Studio, Chris Newell-Akomawt Educational Initiative, Openbox, Once-Future Office, Atelier Ten, and Studio Pacifica were selected through a juried international design competition, designed, developed, and led by Dovetail Design Strategists. When launched in June 2022, the international design competition asked participants to assemble diverse and specialized teams to ensure accessibility, equity, diversity, inclusion, and sustainability were at the heart of their concepts and culture. The unique, two-stage competition attracted submissions from 104 teams representing 20 countries, including Australia, Belgium, China, Denmark, Finland, Japan, Mexico, Spain, South Korea, United Arab Emirates, the United Kingdom, and more. In total, more than 250 firms participated as part of the 104 submitting teams, with 46% of all lead firm submissions owned or founded by people of color or women.
It has been gratifying to lead the PMA on this journey that has delivered exceptional results, shared Susanna Sirefman, Founder and President of Dovetail Design Strategists. Dovetails design competition was created and conducted from beginning to end to be inclusive and to generate design excellence that captures the vision the PMA set for a new type of museum that is a vanguard for open expression and making art accessible to all.
LEVER was selected by a diverse Jury after a monthslong process that included site visits, presentations, a public forum, and community feedback opportunities. The Jury, comprised of arts, business, and cultural leaders, resoundingly chose LEVER due to their creativity and imagination, skill and expertise, team composition and culture, and sustainability and vision.
The incredible team led by LEVER Architecture demonstrated to us that the global paradigm shift in the evolution of art museums begins by looking internally at ourselves, our values, and our relationship to each other, says Kyo Bannai, Board of Trustees, Portland Museum of Art, and Jury member. We are looking forward to working with this team that mirrors our values.
The PMA Board of Trustees unanimously approved the Jurys selection of LEVER Architecture and its thoughtful and deep team, says Eileen Gillespie, President of the PMA Board of Trustees and Jury member. The team that LEVER has put together aligns perfectly with the PMAs values, mission and goals. Together we are going to build a new museum for our community and for generations to come.
The selection of LEVER as our winning team demonstrates a true commitment to the core values that can drive Art for All, adds Marcia Minter, Board of Trustees, Portland Museum of Art, Jury member, and Co-Founder and Executive Director, Indigo Arts Alliance.
Additionally, the Jury considered feedback from the public, who submitted more than 2,000 ideas, questions, and comments to the PMA during the concept gallery display November 18December 31. Opportunities for community feedback have been critical to the PMA throughout its campus planning and The PMA Blueprint process, and in addition to the public comment period this winter have included focus groups, listening sessions, and surveys to ensure the future development of the museums campus is defined by and rooted within the communities it serves.
We are ready to grow because of the immense support from the communities who call our region home, continues Bessire. For years we have heard from our neighbors and friends, within Maine and beyond, that the PMA must do more to create an equitable and sustainable future for alla community epicenter based on belonging. With a growing and diversifying collection, we have the art and ideas to be a keystone for our communities and a catalyst for our economy. Now, we have a visionary partner in LEVER to empower an equitable arts space for the future.
The campus envisioned by LEVER responds to the communities calls for more flexible spaces. These include more barrier-free spaces that make visiting and congregating at the museum easy, opportunities for performance and special events, messy areas for children and families, and plenty of galleries that can display the PMAs diversifying collection and exhibitions.
For the next phase of the project, LEVER and the PMA will develop a final design only after many more months of discussion, community engagement, and partnership. Throughout the design competition, the PMA reiterated that the designs were concepts only, meant to provide insight into the teams visions, culture, and ideas. In selecting LEVER Architecture, the museum is choosing the team it believes will partner with the PMA and greater Portland, Maine, to develop the next great Maine landmark and deliver on the promise of Art for All.
This building will proudly announce to everyone who sees it that Maine is defined by arts and culture, and that museums must belong to everyone, adds Bessire. The PMA Blueprint projects hope to redefine what a museum is by emphasizing that museums and their architecture need to do better to serve their communities equally.