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Yokohama…London…Spain…CLEVELAND!
The Yokohama International Port Terminal is a design sensation—alive
with bustling urbanity and seaside tranquility. The BBC Music Box
in London has been described as the most exciting and innovative
interpretation of the BBC—ever. What do these two places have
in common? Foreign Office Architects (FOA), the London-based, husband-and-wife
design team, credited by Design Museum with “defining a new
language to reflect the speed, ambiguity, and uncertainty of contemporary
life.”
In Foreign Office Architects, MOCA perceives a brilliant creative
partner. During this pivotal time of urban renewal in University
Circle, transformation of the Euclid Corridor, and proliferation
of daring new buildings punctuating the architectural landscape
of Ohio, MOCA hopes to claim center stage within a vibrant urban
mecca, in a building designed by FOA.
Farshid Moussavi and Alejandro Zaera-Polo, alums of the Harvard
Graduate School of Design, founded FOA in 1992. They have carried
out projects in fourteen cities worldwide, are known for combining
technical innovation with design excellence, and for integrating
functional, environmental, and socio-cultural factors.
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All projects are © FOA
Yokohama International Port Terminal
Location: Yokohama, Japan
Client: Port Authority / City of Yokohama
Completion: 2002
Photo: Satoru Mishima |
In
a recent interview, Moussavi explains: “Foreign Office Architects
is delighted that its first major project in the US, and its first
museum anywhere, is the design for a new building for MOCA Cleveland.
Developing a concept that will accommodate diverse art forms, include
ample and inviting public space, work within and contribute to an
exciting urban area, and maintain high environmental standards—all
while ensuring that the building will serve the needs of generations
to come—is an exhilarating prospect. We are grateful to MOCA
for selecting us for this important project.”
MOCA first announced plans for a new building and the accompanying
search for an architect in late 2005. Executive Director Jill Snyder
and nine representatives of the Museum’s
Board, along with stakeholders from the community, comprised
the Architect Search Task Force. In spring 2006 the search was narrowed
from 32 to six firms, and then finally, to three. The decision to
choose FOA came after a visit to the Yokohama Pier and the firm’s
London offices, unambiguously persuading the selection committee
that they had found their ideal candidate.
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MOCA’s
new facility will professionalize the way we operate and diversify
our ambitious exhibition and programming goals. Capacity for new
media, educational and multi-arts programming, as well as enhanced
visitor amenities are key components of our expansion. Additionally,
our proximity to Case, the Cleveland Institute of Art, and other
arts and culture institutions, will enhance our capacity for community
collaboration.
While conceiving of designs for MOCA’s new facility, FOA remains
engaged in a broad spectrum of international projects, including
retail sites in the UK and Turkey, office complexes in London and
Barcelona, social housing in Madrid, and a university complex in
Logroño, Spain. With their use of dramatic form, innovative
materials, and fascination with the interplay of architecture, landscape,
and nature, FOA is commanding attention as an exciting new force
on the international stage and surely promises to build for MOCA
a museum that expresses its mission in dramatic new form. |
Spanish Pavilion at Expo 2005
Location: Aichi, Japan
Client: Spanish Society of International Exhibitions (SEEI)
Completion: 2005
Photo: Satoru Mishima
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