Manuelle Gautrand Architecture

Lille Modern Art Museum

Lille Modern Art Museum
© Max Lerouge – LMCU

LILLE MODERN ART MUSEUM

Manuelle Gautrand Architecture

ARCHITECTS
Manuelle Gautrand Architecture

LOCATION
Villeneuve-d'ascq, France

CATEGORY
Museums & Exhibit, Refurbishment, Lighting

YEAR
2010

AREA
11600.0 m²

MANUFACTURERS
Ductal®, Goppion, Betsinor Composites

PHOTOGRAPHS
Max Lerouge – LMCU, Philippe Ruault, Vincent Fillon

Text description provided by architect.

The project concerns the refurbishment and the extension of the Lille Modern Art Museum in a magnificent park at Villeneuve d’Ascq.

Lille Modern Art Museum
© Max Lerouge – LMCU
Lille Modern Art Museum
© Max Lerouge – LMCU

The existing building, designed by Roland Simounet in 1983, is already on the Historic monuments list.

The project aims at building up the museum as a continuous and fluid entity, this by adding new galleries dedicated to a collection of Art Brut works, from a travelling movement that extrapolates existing spaces.

Lille Modern Art Museum
© Max Lerouge – LMCU
Lille Modern Art Museum
© Max Lerouge – LMCU

A complete refurbishment of the existing building was next required, some parts were very worn.

In spite of the heritage monument status of Simounet’s construction, rather than set up at a distance, we immediately opted to seek contact by which the extension would embrace the existing buildings in a supporting movement.

Lille Modern Art Museum
© Max Lerouge – LMCU
Lille Modern Art Museum
Lille Modern Art Museum
© Max Lerouge – LMCU

I tried to take my cue from Roland Simounet’s architecture, ‘to learn to understand’, so as to be able to develop a project that does not mark aloofness, an attitude that might have been seen as indifference.

The architecture of the extension wraps around the north and east sides of the existing arrangement in a fan-splay of long, fluid and organic volumes.

On one side, the fan ribs stretch in close folds to shelter a café-restaurant that opens to the central patio; on the other, the ribs are more widely spaced to form the five galleries for the Art brut collection.

Lille Modern Art Museum
© Max Lerouge – LMCU
Lille Modern Art Museum
© Max Lerouge – LMCU

The Art brut galleries maintain a strong link with the surrounding scenery, but they are also purpose-designed to suit the works that they house: atypical pieces, powerful works that you can’t just glance at in passing.

The folds in these galleries make the space less rigid and more organic, so that visitors discover art works in a gradual movement.

Lille Modern Art Museum
© Max Lerouge – LMCU
Lille Modern Art Museum
© Max Lerouge – LMCU

The architecture is partly introverted, to protect art works that are often fragile and that demand toned down half-light.

At the extremity of the folds – meaning the galleries – a large bay opens magnificent views onto the surrounding parkland, adding breathing space to the visit itinerary.

Lille Modern Art Museum
© Max Lerouge – LMCU

These views make up for the half-light in the galleries: the openwork screens in front of the bays mediate with strong light and parkland scenery, a feature that recalls Simounet’s generous arrangements in the galleries that he designed.

Envelopes are sober: smooth untreated concrete, with mouldings and openwork screens to protect the bays from too much daylight. The surface concrete has a slight colour tint that varies according to intensity of light.


Lille Modern Art Museum
Plan
Lille Modern Art Museum
Detail


Lille Modern Art Museum
Model
Lille Modern Art Museum
Sketch

Manuelle Gautrand Architecture
T +33 1 56950646
Manuelle Gautrand Architecture
36 Bd de la Bastille, 75012 Paris, France