Napur Architect Kft.

Museum of Ethnography Budapest

Museum of Ethnography Budapest
© Gyorgy Palko

Museum of Ethnography Budapest 

NAPUR Architect

ARCHITECTS
Napur Architect

AREA
34000 M²

YEAR
2022

PHOTOGRAPHS
Gyorgy Palko

LEAD ARCHITECT
Marcel Ferencz Dla

MANUFACTURERS
Kone, Frontoplan, Teco-gastro

INTERIOR DESIGN
Czakó Építész Kft.

STRUCTURAL DESIGNERS
Exon 2000 Ltd.

ACOUSTICS
Animative Kft.

LOCATION
Budapest, Hungary

BUILDING STRUCTURES
Frt Raszter Kft.

GEOTECHNICS
Geoplan Kft.

CLIENT
Városliget Zrt.

LANDSCAPE
Garten Studio Kft.

BREEAM
Denkstatt Hungary Kft.

GENERAL CONTRACTORS
Záév Építőipari Zrt., Magyar Építő Zrt.

ARCHITECTURE TEAM
Détári György, Filó Gergely, Holyba Pál, Nyul Dávid, Grócz Csaba, Koralevicz Kinga, Mészáros Mónika

POWER
Spányi Partners Zrt.

CATEGORY
Museum

BIM
Spányi Partners Zrt.

BUILDING MECHANICS
Hvarc Kft., Hvarc Kft., Hvarc Kft., Hvarc Kft., Hvarc Kft.

FIRE PROTECTION
Prelko Kft.

KITCHEN TECHNOLOGY
Teco-gastro Bt.

ACCESSIBILITY
Nt Control

AUTOMATION
Iq Kft.

Text description provided by architect.

The new building of the Museum of Ethnography in Budapest City Park (Városliget) was opened (on 23/05/2022). The multiple-award-winning new museum building – which is part of Europe’s largest urban-cultural development called Liget Budapest Project.

Museum of Ethnography Budapest
© Gyorgy Palko
Museum of Ethnography Budapest
© Gyorgy Palko

Designed by FERENCZ, Marcel; Napur Architect - has dynamic yet simple lines simultaneously harmonized with the park environment and communicating with the surrounding urban area.

The City Park (Városliget) is a familiar venue for the Museum of Ethnography: its collection debuted here at the 1896 Millennium Exhibition. The City Park (Városliget) is not an entirely unknown venue for the Museum of Ethnography, since it was here in 1896, at the National Millennium Exhibition.

Museum of Ethnography Budapest
© Gyorgy Palko
Museum of Ethnography Budapest
© Gyorgy Palko

The collection, which now comprises 250 thousand items from the Carpathian Basin and from every corner of the world, has been hosted by various facilities since its establishment in 1872, but never in its history did it operate in a building designed specifically to cater to its needs.

The current location, which once was home to the Hungarian Curia, is far from being suitable to meet the requirements of a museum and is severely limited in terms of space and opportunities.

Museum of Ethnography Budapest
© Gyorgy Palko
Museum of Ethnography Budapest
© Gyorgy Palko

As a result of the international design competition, successful construction, and completion in May 2022 the Museum of Ethnography was finally given a new home in a truly modern building of an all-around world-class standard that will satisfy professional requirements while catering to the needs of the collection and visitors alike.

According to the decision of an international jury, the competition was won by the Hungarian architectural studio, Napur Architect (beating leading world-class architect studios such as Zaha Hadid, BIG, etc.), whose building is distinguished by a dynamic yet simple design harmonized with the natural environment of the park while communicating with the urban texture of its surroundings.

Museum of Ethnography Budapest
© Gyorgy Palko
Museum of Ethnography Budapest
© Gyorgy Palko

The gently curving lines enable the building to function as a gateway and a passage linking the city and the park.

Sixty percent of the structure is under ground level, and thanks to the landscaped roof and the transparency of the sections over the ground, the new museum is adapted to its environment in its scale too. The grass-covered roof area will be a pleasant community space awaiting visitors to Városliget.

Museum of Ethnography Budapest
© Gyorgy Palko
Museum of Ethnography Budapest
© Gyorgy Palko
Museum of Ethnography Budapest
© Gyorgy Palko

The spectacular trademark of the building is the glass curtain wall surrounding the landscaped roof garden, reminiscent of two intertwined hillsides, with a unique characteristic, consisting of nearly half a million pixels, a raster made by metal grid based on ethnographic motifs selected from the museum's Hungarian and international collections.

The pixels were inserted into a laser-cut aluminum grid by a special robot, more than 2,000 of which are attached to the building.

Museum of Ethnography Budapest
© Gyorgy Palko
Museum of Ethnography Budapest
© Gyorgy Palko
Museum of Ethnography Budapest
© Gyorgy Palko

The small cubes were made up of 20 Hungarian and 20 international contemporary reinterpretations of ethnographic motifs.

The Museum of Ethnography is already recognized as one of the most exciting contemporary buildings in the continent.

Evidence of that, it was voted for the Best Mega Futura Project of Europe (as part of the Liget Project) at the MIPIM Awards 2017 and has won the fiercely contested title of World’s Best Architecture at the 2018 International Property Awards.

Museum of Ethnography Budapest
© Gyorgy Palko
Museum of Ethnography Budapest
© Gyorgy Palko
Museum of Ethnography Budapest
© Gyorgy Palko

The project was one of over 1700 entries from 115 countries, scrutinized by a judging committee, which is chaired by four UK Lords as well as over 80 global experts.

The new functions and flexible spaces of the modern and state-of-the-art museum building will facilitate the understanding of the historical heritage embodied by the collection as well as the various aspects of contemporary society.

Museum of Ethnography Budapest
© Gyorgy Palko
Museum of Ethnography Budapest
© Gyorgy Palko

Besides passing down this historical heritage, the realization of more recent professional and research themes and perspectives continues to be among the priority objectives of the museum, as confirmed by its mission.

The creatively built spaces will open up new opportunities to communicate with visitors, enabling the presentation of the everyday objects, phenomena, and ideas of the past and the present side by side.

Museum of Ethnography Budapest
© Gyorgy Palko
Museum of Ethnography Budapest
© Gyorgy Palko

The purpose-built museum was designed with maximum consideration for the required functions, and thus facilitates the large-scale, modern, user-friendly operation of the institution to a significant degree, along with the visually enticing and diverse display of mankind’s material and spiritual heritage, as well as the collection comprising Hungarian and international material.



Museum of Ethnography Budapest
© Gyorgy Palko
Museum of Ethnography Budapest
© Gyorgy Palko
Museum of Ethnography Budapest
© Gyorgy Palko
Museum of Ethnography Budapest
© Gyorgy Palko


Museum of Ethnography Budapest
© Gyorgy Palko
Museum of Ethnography Budapest
© Gyorgy Palko
Museum of Ethnography Budapest
© Gyorgy Palko
Museum of Ethnography Budapest
© Gyorgy Palko


Museum of Ethnography Budapest
Section
Museum of Ethnography Budapest
Elevation


Museum of Ethnography Budapest
Plan - Public Roof
Museum of Ethnography Budapest
Plan - 2nd Floor
Museum of Ethnography Budapest
Plan - 1st Floor
Museum of Ethnography Budapest
Plan - Ground Floor
Museum of Ethnography Budapest
Plan - Basement Floor

Napur Architect Kft.
T +36 1 3509577
Napur Architect Kft.
Budapest, Laktanya u. 33a, 1033 Hungary