NCHGS Sigal Museum

Project Description

With the dream of showcasing its collection and providing hands-on activities and experiential learning to the public, NCHGS commissioned an architect to adaptively reuse an existing building and help make history come alive.

Awards

Project Details

  • Client Northampton County Historical and Genealogical Society
  • Location Easton, PA View map
  • Use Museum
  • Sq. ft. 31,626
  • Completed 2010

The Northampton County Historical & Genealogical Society curates one of the richest historical collections in Pennsylvania; however, due to lack of space less than one percent of this collection could be shared with visitors at any given time. The organization’s educational programming was similarly limited – not by the depth of opportunities but by the space available to accommodate visitors. With the dream of showcasing its collection and providing hands-on activities and experiential…

The Northampton County Historical & Genealogical Society curates one of the richest historical collections in Pennsylvania; however, due to lack of space less than one percent of this collection could be shared with visitors at any given time. The organization’s educational programming was similarly limited – not by the depth of opportunities but by the space available to accommodate visitors. With the dream of showcasing its collection and providing hands-on activities and experiential learning to the public, NCHGS commissioned an architect to adaptively reuse an existing building and help make history come alive.

The team began by understanding the client’s goals and vision: lots of flexible spaces to accommodate ever-changing interactive exhibits; library space to house NCHGS’s thousands of rare books and documents and make them accessible in a quiet research room; a community room; and an auditorium to be used by organizations including smaller historical societies that lacked a permanent home. NCHGS also had a building it wished to transform to create this new place: an urban landmark that was once a turn-of-the-century opera house and later (and for many decades) a beloved retail storefront.

The team worked from the inside out, developing spaces that would meet the client’s needs within the shell of the existing three-story plus basement structure. The 31,626-square-foot floor plan was re-created as a shotgun-style volume with zones of flexible programming space divided by a strategically placed central utility core. The first floor of the building was cut away to create a light-filled lower level that expands exhibit space and creates a dramatic main gallery. Also located here is a 100-seat auditorium. The second floor includes additional permanent and alternating exhibit space as well as a community room. The third floor houses NCHGS’s library and archives, dedicated research room, and administrative offices.

The exterior of the building was re-envisioned with a completely new facade crafted of concrete, slate, and glass. Concrete and slate were purposefully selected as they are local materials deeply connected to the region’s industrial heritage. The concrete base grounds the building while the slate, featured as a rain screen, draws the viewer’s eye upward along the full height of the building. Glass curtain walls bring transparency and translucency to the building during the day and transform the structure into a dynamic beacon at night. These materials are incorporated into a design that respects the massing, scale, and proportion of the historic Victorian-era architecture that characterizes downtown Easton.

Award Top 5 Museums & Cultural Spaces – ArchDaily.com, 2010

Project NCHGS Sigal Museum

Award Commercial Real Estate Award – Greater Lehigh Valley Chamber of Commerce, 2011

Project NCHGS Sigal Museum

Award Building of the Week – American-Architects.com, 2012

Project NCHGS Sigal Museum

Award Award of Merit – AIA Pennsylvania Chapter, 2011

Project NCHGS Sigal Museum

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