WASHINGTON, DC.- The National Building Museum created a new, one-of-a-kind destination this summer when it unveiled ICEBERGS, designed by James Corner Field Operations. Representing a beautiful, underwater world of glacial ice fields spanning the Museums enormous Great Hall, the immersive installation emphasizes current themes of landscape representation, geometry, and construction. ICEBERGS opened to the public July 2September 5, 2016, part of the Museums imaginative Summer Block Party series.
ICEBERGS features installation elements in a variety of sizes and built of re-usable construction materials such as scaffolding and polycarbonate paneling, a material commonly used in building greenhouses. A water line suspended 20 feet high bisects the vertical space, allowing panoramic views from high above the ocean surface and down below among the towering bergs. The tallest bergy bit, at 56 feet, reaches above the waterline to the third story balcony of the Museum. ICEBERGS occupies a total area of 12,540 square feet.
Visitors will be able to ascend a viewing area inside the tallest berg, traverse an undersea bridge, relax among caverns and grottoes on the ocean floor, sample Japanese kakigori shaved-ice snacks provided by Daikaya restaurant, and participate in unique educational programming integrating landscape architecture, design, and the environment.
James Corner Field Operations is an urban design, landscape architecture, and public realm practice based in New York City and known for projects such as New Yorks High Line and Santa Monicas Tongva Park. The firm was commissioned by the National Building Museum to create the temporary summer exhibit following last years popular BEACH installation, a playful structure that welcomed over 180,000 visitors during its two month run.
ICEBERGS invokes the surreal underwater-world of glacial ice fields, said James Corner, founder and director of James Corner Field Operations. Such a world is both beautiful and ominous given our current epoch of climate change, ice-melt, and rising seas. The installation creates an ambient field of texture, movement, and interaction, as in an unfolding landscape of multiples, distinct from a static, single object.
ICEBERGS symbolizes an extreme counterpoint to the sweltering heat of the Washington, D.C. summer, said Chase W. Rynd, Hon. ASLA, executive director of the National Building Museum. We hope that James Corner Field Operations striking design will provoke both serious public conversation about the complex relationship between design and landscape, while also eliciting a sense of wonder and play among visitors of all ages.