Showing posts with label Eli Broad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eli Broad. Show all posts

Thursday, February 5, 2015

The Broad to Open September 20, 2015

The Broad (Image: Gary Leonard)

The Broad, the new contemporary art museum in downtown Los Angeles, announced today that it will open to the public on Sunday, September 20, 2015.

Built by philanthropists and longtime art collectors Eli and Edythe Broad, The Broad will welcome visitors from near and far with free general admission to an inaugural installation drawn from two collections of more than 2,000 works of contemporary art. Designed by Diller Scofidio + Renfro (DS+R), The Broad makes its home in the city’s burgeoning Grand Avenue arts corridor, across the street from architectural icons including Walt Disney Concert Hall and the Museum of Contemporary Art.

“Edye and I are delighted to announce an opening date, and we are already looking forward to welcoming the public to our museum,” said Eli Broad. “It is our privilege to give this museum, the works in our art collections and a sizeable endowment and free admission as a gift to the people of Los Angeles.”

“When we open our doors on September 20, we will be greatly advancing Eli and Edye’s vision of sharing contemporary art with the broadest possible audience,” said Joanne Heyler, founding director of The Broad. “The combination of innovative architecture and provocative art will make visiting The Broad an experience to remember.”

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Amid Delays, Progress on Grand Avenue


Related California's revised plan for Phase I of the Grand Avenue Project was soundly rejected last month, but other parts of the slow moving mega development are still pressing forward.  Kitty-corner to the Phase I site, Parcels M and L have two landscape shifting projects under construction.  Work on the Arquitectonica designed Parcel M Tower, which broke ground in January, has now progressed to the lucky 13th floor.  When completed in late 2014, the $120 million development will contain 271 apartments and 5,000 square feet of commercial space within 19-stories.

Image from LargeArch

Next door to the Parcel M Tower, the $140 million Broad Museum is finally starting to resemble the renderings drawn up by Diller Scofidio + Renfro.  Construction crews are now assembling the steel framework to support the precast concrete panels that will form the Broad Museum's honeycombed exterior.  Like the Parcel M Tower, the Broad Museum is scheduled to open late in 2014.  Eli Broad recently made headlines when he declared that his museum shall have free admission.


Image from The Broad

The Broad Museum and the Parcel M Tower will be linked together by a pedestrian plaza, which brings up another interesting possibility.  The Regional Connector subway, scheduled to begin construction next year, features a station adjacent to Parcels M and L at the intersection of 2nd and Hope Streets.  However, accessing the amenities and cultural institutions on Grand Avenue from the station will require walking uphill.  Thus, Metro has drawn up a concept that mitigates this problem by connecting the aforementioned plaza directly to the station via a pedestrian bridge.

2nd/Hope Station pedestrian bridge.  Image from The Source.

While no funding is currently allocated towards the bridge, perhaps some of the institutions on Grand Avenue should consider putting money towards the project.  Related California, the Broad Museum, MOCA and the Music Center all stand to benefit from the improved transit link.  There is some precedent for this, as LACMA has expressed interest in paying for their own subway portal at the future Wilshire/Fairfax station.  Curbed LA reports that a future pedestrian bridge at the Universal City Station will cost an estimated $19.5 million.  That is not a particularly daunting figure, assuming that a bridge for the 2nd/Hope Station carries a similar price tag.