SHARES

Koning Eizenberg Architecture (KEA) designed the transformation of the damaged library into MuseumLab for the Children's Museum of Pittsburgh. It forms an extension of its campus in Pittsburgh's Allegheny Center neighbourhood.
 
The existing building, known as Carnegie Free Library, was commissioned in 1886 for the public by philanthropist and industrialist Andrew Carnegie.
 
It was completed by John L Smithmeyer and Paul J Pelz in the late 1890s and registered a historic building in 1974.
 
It continued to serve as a public library until the clock tower was struck by lightning in 2006, causing a chunk of granite weighing three tons to fall through the roof. The damage forced the library to relocate.
 
KEA's project sought to restore the damaged structure but also reveal the original architecture by peeling back the additions that had been made over the years.
 
MuseumLab comprises three exhibiton spaces, two learning labs as well as programming space for young teens and older, existing details are teamed with contemporary additions.
 
The Santa Monica firm added a white-mesh structure that forms a new staircase and elevated walkway topped by a skylight. The intervention delicately contrasts surrounding stained brickwork to wrap around an open area suited for gatherings.
 
 
Ornate ceilings  top a double-height space punctured by a weathered metal beam. The large room forms the children's workshop complete with large benches and machinery.
 
Exhibition spaces are located in a vaulted space with brickwork and stone walls that are painted white to form a suitable backdrop. Additional spaces are also painted white and include large classrooms and meeting areas.
 
Now MuseumLab is complete, the Children's Museum of Pittsburgh is the largest cultural campus in the US dedicated to children.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Source: Eleanor Gibson