Honor the past while creating a building for the future

Renzo Piano Building Workshop come Architetti

When it opens in the heart of Los Angeles, at the intersection of Wilshire Boulevard and Fairfax Avenue, the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures will be the world’s premier movie museum.

Situated on the famed “Miracle Mile,” the museum will preserve and breathe new life into the former 1939 May Company department store, now re-named the Saban Building. Celebrating its history and imagining new possibilities, the additions to the building that date from 1946 have been removed and replaced with a spherical building that features the 1,000-seat David Geffen Theater and the Dolby Family Terrace with views towards Hollywood. The revitalized campus will feature more than 50,000 square feet of gallery space, two theaters, cutting-edge project spaces, an outdoor piazza, the rooftop terrace, an active education studio, a restaurant, and store.

“The Academy Museum gives us the opportunity to honor the past while creating a building for the future—in fact, for the possibility of many futures. The historic Saban Building is a wonderful example of Streamline Moderne style, which preserves the way people envisioned the future in 1939. The new structure, the Sphere Building, is a form that seems to lift off the ground into the perpetual, imaginary voyage through space and time that is moviegoing. By connecting these two experiences we create something that is itself like a movie. You go from sequence to sequence, from the exhibition galleries to the film theater and the terrace, with everything blending into one experience.”

- Renzo Piano

 

“The Academy Museum will be a hub for film lovers where people from across the city and around the world can enjoy, learn, and engage with movies and moviemakers. For more than 120 years, cinema has been central to global culture and the way we perceive, question, and, at times, escape the world around us. We want to give visitors a place to explore and discuss the impact of film. We hope to transport visitors to a cinematic environment, somewhere between reality and illusion. Like watching a movie, visitors will enter a waking dream—one in which they go inside the movies to experience their magic, as well as the art and science that makes that magic possible.”

- Kerry Brougher, Academy Museum Director

Academy Museum of Motion Pictures

iGuzzini come Lighting

L’ Academy Museum of Motion Pictures, inaugurato nel 2021, è il museo del cinema più importante del mondo.
A Los Angeles, lungo il famoso "Miracle Mile", il museo conserva e dà nuova vita all'ex grande magazzino della May Company ( del 1939)  ora ribattezzato Saban Building. L’architetto Piano ha concepito tutta l’area come un luogo che trasmette il senso di un viaggio nel tempo e nello spazio, che è il senso dell’andare al cinema. Per questo è stato importante mantenere il Saban Building che rappresenta l’idea di futuro che le persone potevano avere nel 1929 ed affiancarlo ad un edificio, come lo Sphere Building dalle forme assolutamente contemporanee e che richiamano le forme dei dirigibili che agli inizi del Novecento qui atterravano, poichè l’area era un campo d’aviazione. 
Per conservare il valore storico dell’edificio che ospitava i Grandi Magazzini May,  immaginando nuove possibilità e funzionalità, Renzo Piano ha scelto di rimuovere  le aggiunte all'edificio che risalivano al 1946 e sostituirle con un edificio sferico che ospita il David Geffen Theatre - da 1.000 posti- e la Dolby Family Terrace con vista su Hollywood. 

Caption

Nell’area del complesso si trovano 4.700 mq. di spazio espositivo, due teatri, una piazza all'aperto, una terrazza sul tetto, uno studio di educazione attiva, un ristorante e spazi commerciali. 
La Motion Pictures Academy, l’organizzazione che gestisce ogni anno la cerimonia della consegna degli Oscar, possiede 13 milioni di oggetti nella loro collezione: dai copioni alle fotografie, costumi, storyboards, scenografie che sono esposti principalmente all'interno del Saban Building.

La progettazione dell'illuminazione artificiale è stata complessa da gestire poiché è legata ad ambienti con caratteristiche architettoniche, funzioni e contributi di illuminazione naturale diversi. All’interno della Sphere Building, nella parte vetrata sono stati utilizzati 55 proiettori Woody, standard per quanto riguarda le ottiche, ma per i quali si sono dovuti studiare sistemi di aggancio che pur rispettando la curvatura della struttura metallica della sfera dessero a terra un risultato di omogeneità e il giusto rilievo e la giusta luce per le riprese in occasione di eventi mondani.

Caption

Un elemento unificante degli esterni e degli  interni è la cosiddetta “Jelly Jar”, un apparecchio creato appositamente per questo progetto che è ispirata a una lampada d’ emergenza dall’aspetto molto “industriale” e che è stata adattato per ottenere il tipo di effetto voluto da Renzo Piano. 
Con un'ottica concentrata solo nella parte centrale del vano ottico, l’apparecchio risulta efficace, e molto facile da graduare a seconda dei luoghi in cui doveva essere installato. 
La Jelly è stata utilizzata in esterni sulla doppia rampa di scale che si trova ai due lati del teatro e che, nella visione notturna, ha  l’aspetto di un elemento appartenente ad un sito industriale. 

Caption

Le Jelly Jar punteggiano le scale ed in interni punteggiano le quattro balconate dell’auditorium , riuscendo a creare una luce molto morbida e “confidenziale” ricordando l’effetto delle lampade che si trovano all'interno di teatri  storici come La Scala. In tutto il sito ci sono circa 350 Jelly Jar, fra interni ed esterni.

L’effetto delle Jelly Jar, nell’auditorium,  è integrato poi da un effetto colorato dato da apparecchi Trick a 180° che posizionati in orizzontale proiettano la luce di fronte, creando delle linee di luce blu che si vedono sotto lo schermo e tutto attorno all’auditorium. Nella sala, per segnalare ed illuminare le scale sono stati utilizzati invece degli Orbit  integrati alla base delle poltrone Frau.

Tornando all’esterno, un effetto molto uniforme è stato ottenuto alla base del David Geffen Theatre -  una parte di servizio che accoglie gli ospiti ma molto evidente-  e che dà il senso di una levitazione della grande sfera vetrata. Circa 170 incassi Orbit con diametro di 80 mm, con ottica wide flood riescono ad ottenere un effetto molto omogeneo sul soffitto e non abbagliano gli ospiti in quanto la sorgente luminosa è profondamente incassata. 

Caption

All’interno delle aree espositive che si trovano tutte nel Saban Building sono stati utilizzati Le Perroquet con diversi sistemi d’aggancio. La sfida più complicata è legata ai Le Perroquet sospesi nella zona degli ascensori che percorrono l’intera altezza dell’edificio. Lungo questa altezza i Le Perroquet sono stati “assicurati” con altri cavi orizzontali , in modo da limitare i loro movimenti in  caso di terremoti. In questo spazio, inoltre,  è esposto “Bruce” l’ultimo modello di squalo rimasto, usato per il film  del 1975 “Lo Squalo” di  Steven Spielberg ed è stato necessario quindi studiare nuovi posizionamenti e sistemi di aggancio specifici. 

In esterni, per la  facciata del Saban Building si è scelto di enfatizzare il cilindro dorato che si trova all’angolo dell'edificio e la linea dorata che si estende per tutta la lunghezza dell’edificio. In questo caso il colore è sottolineato grazie a proiettori iPro con ottica a 9° e schermo bianco.
L’edificio va a inserirsi in un'area in cui Renzo Piano aveva già lavorato per l’estensione, realizzata in diverse tranche,  del Los Angeles County Museum of Arts ( LACMA) a cui iGuzzini aveva ugualmente collaborato negli anni fra 2003 e 2010.

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The glass rooftop dome

Saflex come Produttori

The dome design required careful attention to material selection and design detail and lasted several years. Knippers Helbig Advanced Engineeringdesigned a unique “shingle” system to accommodate the complex geometry and high load requirements of the dome.

The glass rooftop dome consists of a single-layered, braced steel structure covered in shingled glass panels—two panes per grid. They were manufactured with Saflex Structural (DG41) PVB interlayers and installed by Permasteelisa North America. While the inner glass pane is supported by an invisible, custom dead-load pin connection, the outer glass pane is supported by the interlayer—making a stiff interlayer essential. Due to Saflex Structural’s strength and rigidity, the engineers found that it met both requirements.

Since the glass edges are exposed to varying weather conditions, Saflex Structural helps protect against delamination, preserving the dome’s beautiful appearance. It can also be combined with other Saflex PVB interlayers without any negative visual impact, which also contributes to the dome’s clarity. Low-iron glass without a coating created the final effect.

Because Los Angeles is earthquake prone, the dome’s superstructure is supported by base isolators, which allow the structure to move by up to onemeter during the swaying and racking that occurs in a seismic event.

With the collaboration of some of the best architectural and engineering minds from both Europe and America, the motion picture industry will be celebrated for years to come.

The Academy Museum of Motion Pictures in Los Angeles is as unique as the industry it represents. And because one part of the brand-new museum—thesphere—has a glass rooftop dome, it required the superior structural capacity found in Saflex® Structural (DG41) PVB interlayers instead of standard PVB interlayers.

In a town where glamour and glitz are practically a requirement, the giant glass sphere sparkles appropriately. The museum gives visitors a behind-the-scenes look into how films are made while celebrating the power of the movies. Hollywood superstars Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks helped spearhead the project. And its designer, “starchitect” Renzo Piano, is as well known as many of the actors celebrated inside the museum.

Designed by Renzo Piano Building Workshop in Genoa, Italy, the Academy Museum is housed in the historic May Company Building (now called the Saban Building) in Los Angeles. Glass bridges lead to the glass dome, designed for viewing the stars—both the Hollywood and celestial varieties. Located in the lower half of the sphere is the 1,000-seat David Geffen Theater. The all-glass top half of the sphere resides over a rooftop terrace with jaw-dropping views of Los Angeles and the Hollywood Hills.

World’s premier institution devoted to exploring the art and science of movies

Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences come Cliente

Opening announcement

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and the ABC Television Network today announced the 93rd Oscars® ceremony will move to Sunday, April 25, 2021, as a result of the global pandemic caused by COVID-19. The show, which will air live on ABC, was originally scheduled for February 28, 2021.  Coinciding with the Oscars celebration, the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures, initially scheduled to open to the public on December 14, 2020, will now open on April 30, 2021, also as a result of the health crisis.

The Academy Museum of Motion Pictures

The Academy Museum of Motion Pictures will be the world’s premier institution
devoted to exploring the art and science of movies and moviemaking. Visitors to
the museum will experience the magic of cinema and the creative, collaborative
process of filmmaking through the lens of those who make it. Built in Los Angeles,
the movie capital of the world, the museum will be housed in the renovated and
expanded May Company—now the Saban Building—on Wilshire Boulevard and a
distinctive spherical addition designed by Pritzker Prize-winning architect Renzo
Piano with Renzo Piano Building Workshop. The 300,000-square-foot museum will
feature more than 50,000 square feet of gallery space for both a highly
immersive permanent exhibition and a schedule of diverse temporary exhibitions,
two film and performance theaters, a state-of-the-art education studio, and
dynamic spaces for public and special events.

The Academy Museum has actively been acquiring three-dimensional motionpicture objects since 2008. Its holdings now number approximately 2,500 items
representing motion picture technology, costume design, production design,
makeup and hairstyling, and promotional materials. The museum will also draw
from the unparalleled collection of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and
Sciences, which contains a vast range of motion picture production and historyrelated objects and technology, works on paper, and still and moving images
covering the history of motion pictures in the United States and throughout the
world. The collections include more than 12 million photographs; 190,000 film and
video assets; 80,000 screenplays; 61,000 posters; and 104,000 pieces of
production art. Highlights feature more than 1,600 special collections of film
legends such as Cary Grant, Katharine Hepburn, Alfred Hitchcock, and John
Huston.

KEY DATES
1939 The May Company on Wilshire Boulevard opens designed by Albert
C. Martin and Samuel A. Marx
1992 The Streamline Moderne façade is designated a City of Los Angeles
Historic-Cultural Monument (#566)
May 2012 Renzo Piano Building Workshop selected as architect for new
Academy Museum of Motion Pictures
Oct. 2012 Initial design is unveiled
Oct. 2015 Construction begins
2019 Estimated completion of construction

SQUARE FOOTAGE
Total project: 300,000 square feet
Saban Building (formerly May Company): 250,000 square feet
Sphere Building: 45,000 square feet

PRINCIPAL DESIGN
The 300,000-square-foot Academy Museum will feature six stories of dynamic
spaces, including more than 50,000 square feet of immersive permanent and
temporary exhibition galleries, an education studio, two state-of-the-art theaters, as well as dynamic public and special event spaces that include a spectacular roof
top terrace with sweeping views of the Hollywood Hills.

THEATERS
The new 1,000-seat Geffen Theater located in the sphere will become a center for
all visitors and feature daily screenings, major film events including previews,
openings and special presentations with the world’s leading filmmakers. A more
intimate 288-seat theater will offer screenings ranging from Saturday morning
matinees for children of all ages to a global cinema series. Both theaters will be
home to an array of live performances, lectures, panels, and other events that will
bring the most notable film artists of today to Los Angeles. Theaters will be
equipped to present film with multidimensional sound experiences and superior
screen quality.

MATERIALS
Saban Building: concrete; steel; steel-reinforced concrete; glass; gold leaf mosaic
tile from the original manufacturer, Orsini, of Venice, Italy will be used to restore
the iconic cylinder; limestone from Austin, Texas will be used to restore the
historic building façade. 

Concrete, precast, steel; steel-reinforced concrete; and specialty glass for its dome to be fabricated in Steyr, Austria by St Gobain.

DESIGN ARCHITECT
Renzo Piano Building Workshop with contribution to concept design by Studio Pali Fekete architects.

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