The Guardian (USA)

British architect choice for controvers­ial revamp of Athens ‘museum of museums’

- Helena Smith in Athens

It is slated to be the “western world’s museum of museums”, a showcase of Greece’s greatest repository of ancient art.

Once completed, the revamped National Archaeolog­ical Museum in Athens will, say officials, not only have been expanded but “reborn” at a time of record tourism to the country.

“Today I have been profoundly persuaded that a personal dream of mine has become reality,” the Greek prime minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis told an audience at the museum for the unveiling of the new design on Wednesday.

The emblematic work, overseen by the British architect Sir David Chipperfie­ld, is expected to last five years. Presenting the plans, the Briton emphasised that the goal was not to compete with the museum’s main neoclassic­al building, which houses one of the finest collection­s of antiquitie­s globally, but to complement the historic landmark by drawing on the original design. “Our architectu­ral approach has been to create a plinth growing out of the existing building … [that] at the same time develops into a powerful piece of architectu­re,” he said.

“The challenge, of course, is to get those two things in balance.”

The proposed renovation was unanimousl­y selected from a shortlist of 10 by an internatio­nal evaluation committee last month. Chipperfie­ld, renowned for his restoratio­n of the Neues Museum in Berlin, has calculated the constructi­on will generate about 20,000 sq m of additional space, including two floors of subterrane­an galleries, a lush roof garden and streetleve­l entrance.

But like most public works it is controvers­ial.

Not since the Acropolis Museum was built back in 2009 at the foot of the fifth century BC site has a project of such scope stirred such debate or emotion. Before the proposed design had been chosen, the Associatio­n of Greek Architects had threatened to take the issue of the competitio­n’s rules to the Council of State, the country’s supreme administra­tive court, after it became clear that only award-winning foreign firms with experience in museum work would be permitted to participat­e.

“It is unacceptab­le that Greek architects were not allowed to take part,” said Tassis Papaioanno­u, emeritus professor of architectu­re at the National University of Athens. “We are seriously thinking of taking it to court because the way they have proceeded so far is illegal.”

Greek renovation experts have also objected to the scale of the new entrance, saying photoreali­stic images released by the winning team are overly

optimistic. “The new constructi­on will virtually eclipse the original 19th building from public view at street level,” said Costas Zambas, who headed restoratio­n works at the Acropolis for 25 years. “After yesterday’s presentati­on it is clear that what is one of the great neoclassic­al monuments in Athens will be hidden if this overly optimistic approach is allowed.”

Chipperfie­ld, described as a master of works dealing “in dignity, in gravitas, in memory and in art”, told the Guardian his team had wrestled with similar concerns. “You can’t make an omelette without breaking eggs,” he said after the presentati­on. “From certain angles, it is true, it will have an impact but the question is whether it amounts to significan­t harm or whether [the change in view] is just different. It’s a perfectly valid question. Our concerns are not dissimilar.”

Mitsotakis, whose centre right government faces re-election this year, has made the renovation a cultural priority, saying it will not only put the institutio­n on the map but help revive an entire district in downtown Athens.

“We display less than 10% of what we have in our warehouses,” he said of its vast collection. “It has always troubled me that just over 500,000 visitors come to the museum every year when it hosts such an incredible wealth of world cultural heritage.”

 ?? Photograph: Angelos Tzortzinis/AFP/Getty Images ?? Only internatio­nal architects were allowed to submit designs to renovate the National Archaeolog­ical Museum in Athens.
Photograph: Angelos Tzortzinis/AFP/Getty Images Only internatio­nal architects were allowed to submit designs to renovate the National Archaeolog­ical Museum in Athens.

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