Three Visions for LA's La Brea Tar Pits
John Hill
27. d’agost 2019
La Brea Tar Pits with the Page Museum beyond (Photo courtesy of La Brea Tar Pits)
The Natural History Museums of Los Angeles County (NHMLAC) has unveiled three conceptual master plans — by Copenhagen's Dorte Mandrup and Diller Scofidio + Renfro and WEISS/MANFREDI, both from New York — that reimagine the world-famous La Brea Tar Pits.
The competition began in March 2019 with a call for international architects to assemble interdisciplinary teams. In June NHMLAC selected the three finalists who presented their designs to the public yesterday, August 26. The winner will be announced in December 2019, following input from the public (between now and September 15 at the Tar Pits and at TarPits.org) and input from a jury of "leading figures from the fields of architecture, landscape architecture, design, science, natural history and the arts."
The vision in the winning master plan will become the first renovation to La Brea Tar Pits since the addition of the George C. Page Museum in 1977. The Tar Pits and Page Museum are located in Hancock Park, directly east of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), which is in the process of building a tar-pit-inspired expansion designed by Peter Zumthor.
NHMLAC, which oversees the Tar Pits and two other Los Angeles museums, has made improvements to the Tar Pits, the Page Museum, and its portion of the park over the years, but the new master plans are meant to address three goals: "We want to preserve and enhance community use of Hancock Park while making the collection more visible to the public, showing science in action, and adding to our visitor amenities," in the words of NHMLAC President and Director Dr. Lori Bettison-Varga.
Below are images of the three conceptual master plans with descriptions courtesy of the architect-led teams.
Diller Scofidio + Renfro
Elizabeth Diller, Ricardo Scofidio, and Charles Renfro:
Diller Scofidio + Renfro: "The Masterplan merges geometries of museum and park, tracing a grid of pathways and landscapes that anticipates future dig sites and seeps while selectively deforming to connect key features of the site and beyond." (Image: DS+R)
Diller Scofidio + Renfro: "A New Arrival Plaza at the Corner of Wilshire & Curson welcomes visitors to the Tar Pits and extends into a ramped museum forecourt, descending 12 feet and 20,000 years in the past." (Image: DS+R)
Diller Scofidio + Renfro: "Public engagement with science occurs throughout the masterplan, including new glass edge of the Tar Pit Lake, revealing this iconic site feature to be a former asphalt mine since filled by rain water." (Image: DS+R)
Diller Scofidio + Renfro: "The reimagined Page Museum lobby is anchored by a hovering 'Archive Block,' a glass enclosed repository for the museum’s collection and surrounded by public circulation and an ascending circuit of exhibition galleries." (Image: DS+R)
Dorte Mandrup
Dorte Mandrup-Poulson:
Dorte Mandrup: "To unfold the story hidden in the tar pits, we interweave, extend and open up the park and museum, and let people experience the living laboratory that this place truly is." (Image: Dorte Mandrup / Martha Schwartz Partners)
Dorte Mandrup: "A visit here should be a journey of curiosity where the senses and imagination are awakened, with exploratory wayfinding, active research sites, a megafauna playground and prehistoric plants and trees." (Image: Martha Schwartz Partners)
Dorte Mandrup: "Surrounded by Pleistocene fauna, a series of boardwalks connects all activities in the park and lead people curiously up towards the new, open foyer in the Page Museum." (Image: Dorte Mandrup / Martha Schwartz Partners)
Dorte Mandrup: "In the open foyer, visitors passing through get glimpses of activities in the building – below, and above, the collection of spectacular creatures are presented in excavations, laboratories and exhibit spaces." (Image: MIR)
WEISS/MANFREDI
Marion Weiss and Michael Manfredi: