Abade Pedrosa Museum
Renovation of Abade Pedrosa Municipal Museum. The new museum includes the International Contemporary Sculpture Museum and Municipal Museum Abade Pedrosa. Nominated for the Mies van der Rohe Award 2017.
Respecting and following the preliminary program delivered by the Municipality, the proposal is based on the construction of a new building to house the MIEC collection and renovation of the building where currently operates the MMAP. The connection between the two buildings is punctual and although functionally connects both, it allows to keep them independent in form and language. The aim is to access both museums by a common entrance through the new building. It is intended with this approach, create a unique customer service – atrium - with access to two museums that although they have different programs, they share some common areas.
MIEC - International Contemporary Sculpture Museum
The site for the construction of the MIEC has an area of 2156.83 sqm and confronts:
- North, 'Misericórdia of Santo Tirso' (Agricultural Professional School Conde S. Bento) and Santo Tirso Municipality (Municipal Museum Abade Pedrosa);
- South, with Rua Unisco Godiniz;
- West, with Rua Unisco Godiniz Street and square access to Municipal Museum Abade Pedrosa;
- East, 'Misericórdia of Santo Tirso' (Agricultural Professional School Conde S. Bento).
The design of the new museum took into account the exception site where it is located, as well as the definition and adaptation to the surrounding environment and the Monastery of São Bento, building in which currently operates the Municipal Museum Abade Pedrosa.
The Monastery of São Bento set from the beginning the premises of the volumes of the new Museum. The new building found the cornice of the lower limit of the Monastery as its maximum level, so as not to disturb or to overlap to this historic building, which will have to establish a physical relationship of continuity. This connection is made through an "arm" that starts in the main volume. For this connection take place, it was demolished an existing annex where, in our view, does not dignify the image of the Monastery.
The definition of volumetric proposal resulted from the intention of defining the square access to the new museum and also the old museum (Municipal Museum Abade Pedrosa). From this premise, the new museum MIEC develops parallel to the existing north wall, releasing the south area to the promenade that faces the street Unisco Godiniz.
The layout of the building parallel to North/East wall, resolves the transition height between the base of both buildings in the confrontation with 'Misericórdia of Santo Tirso' building replacing the canceled connection between 'Misericórdia of Santo Tirso' and Street Unisco Godiniz:
- Creation of a fire emergency way from level -1 to public road;
- Introduction of natural light to the exhibition spaces on level -1.
The selected scheme for the building implantation takes on particular meaning in the functional organization of the museum. From the main entrance, facing the old museum, we access to the lobby that connects with the Municipal Museum Abade Pedrosa, with the reception and the vertical accesses. The pavement heights have continuity with the Monastery of São Bento.
The main floor is arranged after the atrium in the following order:
- The shop in direct contact with the atrium;
- The cafeteria and its services (Kitchen and sanitary);
- Administration (office, meeting room and toilets);
- The documentation center that works as exhibition area and computer center.
This division has an emergency exit to the main square, through the service entrance of the building. And the culmination of this journey is the building's service entrance, where is the freight elevator which carries all the contents from street level to the storage and archive rooms that serves all the exhibition rooms in level -1.
The level -1 develops in the following way:
- The second multi-purpose exhibition area serves as area of temporary exhibitions and performing activities. This option has to do with the fact that in the level -1 , the contact with the outside is only possible on the North side. Thus this space was partitioned into three rooms open to the public, all served by natural light;
- The study and recreation area ( also the educational services) between two exhibition rooms facing north with constant natural lighting;
- The public toilets in the south/west end;
- The technical area and archive that communicates with the ground floor through a freight elevator;
In the basement, detached from the area of implantation of the MIEC and east side of the chapel, is located technical room reserved for mechanical building installations. The option distancing and implementation of technical room below street level, is to try to minimize visual disturbance and noise produced by the machines next to the chapel and buildings of the museums.
Constructively the new museum consists of concrete walls coated inside with high density plasterboard (required in exhibition rooms); on the outside was used ETICS system with high density mineral wool, coated with reinforced flat plaster and painted white, such as the surrounding buildings. A granite paneling sets the base of the museum also visible in existing buildings.
The interior walls are made of high density gypsum with metal partitioning. The interior walls are protected, mostly by a marble panelling in the public areas, or a marble skirting in exhibition areas. In the technical or service areas walls are protected by a wooden paneling to the height of the lintel of the door.
The slabs are mixed of reinforced concrete on iron profiles.
Apart from the technical and service areas where it was applied self-leveling flooring or granite, the material used in the floor is marble.
All areas will be properly waterproofed and insulated.
The waterproofed outdoor decks will be in Caverneira yellow granite.
The window frames are made of wood with double glazing.
The roof of the new museum (MIEC) visually exposed to the high levels of the city was subject to a surface treatment using ceramic tiles.
MMAP – Municipal Museum Abade Pedrosa
The Municipal Museum Abade Pedrosa is located in the former guesthouse of the Monastery of São bento, a building integrating the heritage complex called - Monastery of São Bento, still classified as a National Monument.
The building is located on the north side of the city of Santo Tirso, near the River Ave, and confronts:
- West, Abade Pedrosa square, that set the forecourt of the church and the convent building;
- South, the Street Unisco Godinis;
- East, one access road to the cellar belonging to the current agricultural school.
The building has two floors, but only the top floor, at the level of the street Unisco Godinis, belongs to the Museum. Of rectangular plan and longitudinal development, it is organized to the west by a corridor which occupies the entire building length and to East by several rooms of different sizes and with specific links between them. The access to the rooms is carried out through the corridor several doors, sometimes more than one door for each room.
The granite masonry building has walls plastered with mortar clay painted in white, keeping the apparent granite in structural elements of the building, frames, pillars, fenestrations, entablatures, etc.
The South Elevation has a very highlighted pediment where inscribes a monumental coat of Order of São Bento. Symmetrical to the existing window, in place of the current museum entrance door and framing the coat, there was another window. In 1842, in the course of adaptation works, resulted in the destruction of this window and the construction of a small addition on east side of the face, whose architectural features wrested the strict symmetry of the original composition.
The building's roof consists of a gabled roof, ceramic tile, supported by a brown wooden structure.
The proposed intervention in MMAP is based on two main principles:
To preserve the architectural features of the existing building and replace the elements that return its original composition.
- Provide the museum with necessary structures to regular operation, particularly with respect to issues arising from the approval of the Security Plan, the conditions for the reception of the public and exhibition conditions of the temporary and permanent exhibitions areas.
- Functional organization in four key areas of the MMAP Museum:
1 - a first intermediate space between the two museums, with reception, toilets and access to the technical area;
2 - a circulation corridor with a designated area for the media exposure and access to all rooms of the museum;
3 - an auditorium for 56 people with movable furniture in order to allow room flexibility;
4 - seven showrooms, crossed by a route alternative to the corridor, with a glass showcase per room. These showcases simultaneously serve as an exhibition box, as storage, as space required for access to technical areas and as a supporting element to the lighting of the rooms.