PARIS.- The Musée du Louvre and the Nord-Pas de Calais region have announced the winner of the competition to build a conservation and storage facility for the Musée du Louvre in Liévin in northern France (Nord-Pas de Calais). The project has been granted to a consortium consisting of the British architecture firm Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners, the consortiums representative and best known for the British Museums new World Conservation and Exhibitions Centre in London (2014); the French firm Mutabilis Paysage (landscape architects); Egis Bâtiments Nord (technical consultancy); Inddigo SAS (environmental consultancy); and VPEAS SAS (economists). Richard Rogers was awarded the Pritzker Architecture Prize in 2007.
The consortium designed a 20,000 m2 landscape building, with a slightly sloping roof, fully covered with vegetation. Understated and elegant, it combines light-filled spaces for people to work and art to circulate, and cutting-edge technology to guarantee stable climatic conditions for the proper conservation of the Louvres collections. Functional and accessible, the new building will welcome scientists and researchers from end-2018. Construction is set to begin in 2017. The construction budget mounts to 35 million euros, and the overall cost of the project 60 million euros. The Musée du Louvre will finance 51% of the project, and the regional council of Nord-Pas de Calais 49%.
Approximately 250,000 works of art, currently stored in more than 60 different locations both inside and outside the Louvre palace (in Greater Paris and other French regions), will be transferred to the site as soon as the building is complete. The artworks will therefore be in one sole location, in the immediate vicinity of the LouvreLens.
Transferring the museums reserve collections is a step aimed at protecting the art from the risk of centennial flooding. The move is intended to create a facility for study and researchone of Europes largestto enhance the scientific renown of the Musée du Louvre.
Jean-Luc Martinez, President-Director of the Musée du Louvre The consortium of architects, headed by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners, has succeeded in taking the specific needs of properly preserving and accessing the Louvres collections, and turning them into a first-class architectural creation. The project proposes innovative solutions in terms of sustainable development and the buildings thermal mass. It is particularly commendable for providing a response that is perfectly in line with the plan to ensure stable climatic conditions for storing art, and for the organization of day-to-day interactions in a one-story space. The architects also had people in mind when designing this light-filled space nestled in nature, taking into consideration the comfort level of the personnel who will work there, conducting research on the works of art. The new facility will be in perfect dialogue with its neighbor, the Louvre-Lens.
Daniel Percheron, President of the Nord-Pas de Calais region The project for a conservation and storage facility, designed by a Franco-British team, is in line with the threefold vision of the Nord-Pas-de-Calais region, with the support of Euralens: a cultural facility with the creation of the Musée du Louvre-Lens; economic renewal with the support of centers of excellence, notably in relation to the art and culture economy and art professions; and lastly, an environmental dimension with the onset of the third industrial revolution.