News and Events

A new space for special collections opens at the San Diego Natural History Museum

Rebecca Maloney Rebecca Maloney Americas Press Office ,Boston
20 August 2016

Arup worked in collaboration with Place Architecture to renovate a space for rotating special collections at the San Diego Natural History Museum.

We provided structural engineering services for the renovation of a wing of the museum that once provided back-of-house storage space. Redeveloped to showcase a special collections gallery, what was once a forbidding, closed-off space is now an integrated and enticing part of the museum experience.

Elements of the transformation include two new mezzanines that were constructed within the existing double-height space to serve as research reading rooms. The space is defined by two 40ft architecturally exposed steel truss railings. The trusses offer a synthesis of form and function, creating a column-free space between existing building columns while also serving as railings and affording the necessary floor height clearances below. The trusses, which create a dynamic aesthetic for the otherwise serene backdrop of the library, were developed using a series of parametrically driven algorithms assessing bar diameter, slope, spacing, and density.

The design also includes a free-standing, architecturally glazed structural aluminium enclosure around the existing Foucault pendulum cable that penetrates the floor. In total, the redeveloped area is approximately 4,800ft2.