• Because we are disqualified for breaking the guidelines of the city plan, we can not win. So they invent a “Special Prize” for us.

    We soon notice it means we become a sideshow in a game of politics, bigger and more ruthless than architecture...

    Friday, 07 January 2011
  • The brief calls for a symmetrical addition, a geometry oppressed by the “Stalin’s tooth”. We can’t bring ourselves to do that - this tower needs to be challenged.

    To fight in terms of scale is impossible. So the proposal becomes everything the Palace of Culture isn’t:
    The flat façade facing the huge square is extrovert; its aim is to steal attention through transparency and communicating to the surroundings: interior, movement, art, circulation... The sculptural façade is reflective of the surrounding park, asymmetric and soft in form. Freedom is implied by leaving most of the given footprint unbuilt instead of closing it all off, as suggested by the city plan.

    Friday, 07 January 2011
  • ALA entry to Munch museum competition in 2008.

  • Site in 2006.

  • Lue Helsingin sanomien artikkeli klikkaamalla kuvaa.

  • Finished!

  • Přečtěte si celý článek popisuje tisku!

  • Klaus Stolt työstämässä Varsovan kisan pienoismallia.

  • Přečtěte si celý článek popisuje tisku!

  • Přečtěte si celý článek popisuje tisku!

  • Přečtěte si celý článek popisuje tisku!

  • Přečtěte si celý článek popisuje tisku!

  • Wilhelm Sasnal Airplanes.

  • history of the site

  • "Enemmistö piti Rzeczpospolita- lehden mukaan suomalaispuolalaista veistoksellista ehdotusta kiinnostavimpana." HS

    Thursday, 30 December 2010
  • "I am ready to struggle for the project that was specially distinguished."

    Tadausz Zielniewicz, Director of the Warsaw Museum of Modern Art,

    Warsaw, February 21st, 2007

Warsaw MoMA

The site is almost like a conceptual art installation of recent Polish history- downtown Warsaw, destruction during war, Palace of Culture from the communist years, new skyscrapers of the liberated economy- and a major opportunity for a landmark cultural institution for the new millennium. The new museum building is expected to stand out on a local and global scale.

On a local scale the new museum is inevitably involved in a clash of statements and values with the Soviet-era neighbor, the Palace of Culture. The museum should be strong enough to attract artists and visitors on its own terms, and act as a beacon for the new contemporary Polish culture.

The project has only two surfaces. The glass wall represents and enables the digital world of direct, location-independent communication. It works locally as a gigantic shop window and display board, utilizing visual communication methods from transparency to manual manipulation and digital projection. It reveals, protects and enhances the physical, “real” art behind it.

The sculptural curving wall is a solid and permanent feature born out of the current conditions and inspirations. It is real and mesmerizing, and will remain as a document of our time while the glass wall keeps evolving and the contents changing. It is clad in a chromium-like finish, thus literally reflecting the local surroundings in a unique way. The museum interior is delineated by these two surfaces. It is a combination of their different qualities. It has generic and unique aspects, light and dark moments and permanent and temporary features. The art can be totally isolated inside, or it can be totally exposed to the outside. The art can be inspired by the space and take on its unique qualities, or it can ignore the space and turn it into a new condition just for itself. The amount and quality of light can be modified by manipulating the glass wall. The large gallery spaces can be divided into smaller units, or the whole museum can act as one continuous space.

Name: Warsaw MoMA

Type: Competition, Special Mention

Program: 35.800m2 Museum + 12.200m2 garage

Location: Warsaw, Poland

Client: State of Poland, City of Warsaw

Team: Juho Grönholm, Antti Nousjoki, Janne Teräsvirta, Samuli Woolston

Collaborators: Grupa5 (local architect), Jaroslaw Kosaciewicz (local artist), Klaus Stolt (scale model)

Rendered (10 images)
Drawings (5 images)
Model photos (5 images)