Los Angeles Times

Future home’s big vision

The Orange County Museum of Art aims for higher profile with a new Segerstrom site.

- O.C. museum is aiming high

Orange County Museum of Art’s future home will be in a building designed by Thom Mayne.

The Orange County Museum of Art unveiled plans Thursday for its future home, a Thom Mayne-designed building at Costa Mesa’s Segerstrom Center for the Arts that represents a move 10 years in the making.

The new 52,000-squarefoot building will increase exhibition space by 50% compared with the museum’s current location in Newport Beach, officials said. The 25,000 square feet of gallery space will be complement­ed with 10,000 square feet dedicated to educationa­l programs, performanc­es and other public events.

The modern building will have an open-air roof terrace covering 70% of the museum site. The plaza, with indoor art galleries tucked beneath it, will host film screenings and outdoor art installati­ons, among other events. The outdoor space will be key to the museum’s identity, said Mayne, the Pritzker Prize winner who founded the Culver City-based firm Morphosis.

“Rather than building an icon, we chose to expand the public space, which the building supported. I’d say we gave the site back,” Mayne said, adding that his vision is for the museum to be intimately stitched into the Segerstrom campus, the largest arts hub in Orange County. The center includes three other buildings that together host eight performanc­e venues, including the outdoor Argyros Plaza.

“The project was interested, very early on, in its relationsh­ip to the urban setting as well as its relationsh­ip to the community,” Mayne said. “It faces the plaza that connects us to the campus — we’re the last component of the cultural center we’re part of. So it’s part of a broader idea.”

Segerstrom Center is home to the Pacific Symphony, the Philharmon­ic Society of Orange County and the Pacific Chorale, and it hosts major touring production­s; “Hamilton” ended its Orange County run there Sunday. The center is also adjacent to the South Coast Repertory theater.

The new building will be “very site specific,” Mayne said. However, in designing the staircase that leads from Argyros Plaza to the art museum’s terrace, Mayne added, he took inspiratio­n from the Metropolit­an Museum of Art’s entrance stairs, where visitors often gather for conversati­on.

The Met stairs, he said, are “a social conduit. It’s a very urban piece. And we were interested in developing a very urban idea in a suburban environmen­t.”

OCMA Director Todd D. Smith called the design accessible and dynamic — “all the things you want of a 21st century art museum.”

The increase in exhibition space, he added, will allow OCMA to showcase work from its collection — more than 3,500 objects of modern and contempora­ry art from California and Pacific Rim artists gathered since the late 1960s — while simultaneo­usly hosting traveling exhibition­s.

“The story of this museum has only ever been told in episodes and moments, not in one story,” he said. “This is a much newer way to look at the collection, and trends emerging around it, and trends that preceded it. The new space gives us the freedom to show our collection as a core exhibition. And to have a core identity.”

A timeline was also part of Thursday’s reveal: The museum will close its home at 850 San Clemente Drive in Newport Center, by the Fashion Island shopping center, where it has been for 41 years, on June 17. Groundbrea­king of the new building will take place in mid-2019 with the goal of opening in 2021. In the interim, OCMA will present exhibition­s and public programs starting Oct. 6 in a former retail space in South Coast Plaza Village in Santa Ana.

The sale of the Newport Beach property to Vivante Newport Center, a subsidiary of Nexus Developmen­t Corp., has been finalized — one step in a long road of challenges for OCMA.

Exhibition space has long been an issue at the museum, which has tried over the last 30 years to expand. Multiple building projects, for different locations, have been complicate­d by leadership changes, financing challenges and disagreeme­nts over architects, among other issues.

The plan for OCMA’s move to Segerstrom was set in motion about a decade ago. In 2008, 1.64 acres of Segerstrom’s campus was donated to OCMA. But fundraisin­g efforts were set back by the recession. In 2011, the project picked up steam .

In 2016, OCMA attempted to sell its land to Related California, which proposed building a highrise condominiu­m on the site. Proceeds from the sale would go toward the move to Segerstrom. But local activists opposed the plan and in February 2017 the city council revoked its developmen­t approval. Earlier this year, the city of Newport Beach settled two lawsuits involving OCMA and activists.

“But it’s important to remember: In 2016, works in our collection that went to exhibition­s around the U.S. and Europe were seen by 1.2 million people,” Smith said. “There’s this whole other side to our history that hasn’t been allowed to shine because so much of the news has been about real estate. Now we get to start a new conversati­on about what our future looks like.”

The Times has reported previously that OCMA’s building and relocation costs were in the ballpark of $50 million. Smith said that figure refers to a previous design — the current one is Mayne’s third — and isn’t accurate. He would not comment on the cost of the new building or how much the museum has raised.

“We’ll announce the campaign and our progress on the campaign later this year,” he said.

The new location will allow OCMA to play a more prominent role in the SoCal arts scene, Smith added.

He said the move will help to make Segerstrom “a world-class performing and visual arts complex.”

 ?? Morphosis Architects ?? THE DESIGN by Pritzker winner Thom Mayne makes outdoor spaces key to the new museum’s identity.
Morphosis Architects THE DESIGN by Pritzker winner Thom Mayne makes outdoor spaces key to the new museum’s identity.

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