Architecture studio Snøhetta has been tapped to design the transformation of the Natural History Museum of Lille following an international competition. The city is located in the north of France on the Belgium border.

The project develops Lille’s ambition to redefine its university district through a program of new urban developments, renewal and preservation of some city areas.
 
"In such a significant city with long-established traditions within culture and arts, we are excited to work on a project which is paying homage to and respecting the heritage as well as looking ahead. Through our design, we aim to revitalize the museum as a landmark and aspire to find the most sustainable solutions, contributing to the City of Lille's sustainability goals."
Kjetil Trædal Thorsen, co-founder of Snøhetta.
Accompanied by a transdisciplinary team featuring the scenographer Adeline Rispal, the landscape architects of Taktyk, the engineering firm Quadriplus and the construction economist VPEAS, Snøhetta will restore and modernize the museum for a planned reopening in 2025.

The project’s scope will reportedly entail the removal of recent extensions to the three building parts of the museum, the preservation of the original facades, and the addition of circulation areas and other flexible spaces inside. An interconnecting brick-clad extension will be included to better unify the museum’s exhibition areas, storage spaces, and technical operations while increasing accessibility to the site.


Natural History Museum of Lille by Snøhetta. Rendering courtesy of Snøhetta.
 

Project description by Snøhetta

Combining renewal and preservation
Since Lille was chosen as the European Capital of Culture in 2004, it has set an example in the field of artistic and cultural innovation both in France and on a European scale.

The city and its university district are currently undergoing a larger urban transformation with the ambition to combine renewal and preservation. This historic district, composed of many neo-classical buildings dating from the 19th century, is welcoming new university institutions such as Sciences Po Lille as well as projects for housing and other facilities.

In conjunction with its 200th anniversary in August this year, the Natural History Museum will undertake a major architectural and scientific transformation to enhance the museum's prominent position further, aiming to make knowledge more available to all.

By combining heritage preservation and contemporary museum exhibition design, the project will support the city's ambition to combine urban renewal with the preservation of the city's historic architecture. ​

"The Snøhetta team has thoroughly rethought the design of the museum to propose an ambitious scientific program for the Lille Natural History Museum. While the museum is a place where one dream, grows and learns, it is also a tool that must enable the efficient management and upkeep of the thousands of pieces in its collections."

Judith Pargamin, Director of the Natural History Museum of Lille.

Opening up the museum to the city
The ambition is to restore the building's overall coherence and identity, thereby enabling the museum to be better integrated into its urban context and offer more generosity in the public space. Working with the history and inherent qualities of the building enables us to create the conditions for its transformation", explains Kjetil Trædal Thorsen.

The building's original volume, comprised of three parallel buildings separated by courtyards, will be more densely planted and open to the city by removing the most recent and less functional extensions. The building's historic façades will also be preserved through cleaning and restoration.

The visitors will be provided with a more immersive experience through new, open circulation areas and flexible spaces, ensuring the best conditions for a more holistic and constantly renewed understanding of the museum's collections.

Enhancing accessibility and visitor experiences
 A contemporary extension will run through the three parts of the building, connecting the exhibition spaces, the storage spaces, and the collections into a coherent whole. This will provide better accessibility and experience for the circulation of the visitors and staff as well as the building's technical services, similar to a spine in the human body.

This extension will also make new thematic gardens in the museum's courtyards more visible and accessible, complementing the exhibitions.

The spine is a contemporary reinterpretation of the traditional buildings from the old town of Lille, with a brick-clad façade and a soft and comforting interior with wooden finishes.
Flexible exhibition spaces

The museum will project a very contemporary image through the extension, yet future visitors will continue to enjoy the beloved space of the "Grande Galerie", filled with the peculiar atmosphere of the early 20th-century cabinets of curiosities.

New welcome spaces will be created as well as dedicated children's areas to provide a visitor experience catered to the museum of the future. Designed in collaboration with the renowned exhibition designer Adeline Rispal, they will be flexible and adapted to new display methods associating transversality with a holistic approach to science.

The new temporary exhibition spaces are designed to function as a toolbox allowing the museum's teams to assemble a wide variety of shows offering visitors a constantly changing experience.


Natural History Museum of Lille by Snøhetta. Diagram courtesy of Snøhetta.

Ambitious environmental goals
Snøhetta has developed an ambitious project from an environmental perspective on multiple levels; by renovating the building's exterior by implementing high-performing insulation and sealing, integrating economical ventilation equipment and the use of passive cooling. The building will be connected to the urban heating network, and photovoltaic panels will be installed to produce electricity. In addition, rainwater will be harvested for use in sanitary facilities and for watering the museum's gardens.

Bio-sourced materials and materials from re-use channels are explored for possible further reduction of the project's carbon impact, for instance, by recovering the bricks from the demolition of the current extensions.

Tree-shaded gardens in the museum's two courtyards will create cool islands in the heart of the building, allow rainwater to penetrate the ground, and enable the installation of flora and fauna in the urban environment.

Snøhetta's desire to work on sustainable construction solutions meets the ambitious environmental objectives of the city of Lille, particularly through the application of the Lille Low Carbon Pact, which was signed by the city in June 2021, bringing together more than 140 participants from the construction sector to collectively pursue goals for a low carbon city.

More information

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Architects
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Collaborators
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Lead architect.- Snøhetta.
​Exhibition designer.- Atelier Adeline Rispal.
​Landscape architect.- Taktyk.
​Building engineer.- Quadriplus Groupe.
​Environmental engineer.- Katène.
​Construction economist.- VPEAS.
​Conservation specialist.- ASK.
​Lighting designer.- Les Eclaireurs.
​Multimedia designer.- Innovision.
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Client
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City of Lille.
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Area
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7,500 m².
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Dates
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Competition.- 2022.
Museum opening.- 2025.
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Snøhetta is an architecture, landscape, and interior design studio with offices in Oslo, Norway, and New York City, USA. Founded in 1989, it is led by Craig Dykers and Kjetil Thorsen. The studio, named in honour of Mount Snøhetta, the highest peak in the Dovrefjell mountains of Norway, has approximately 100 collaborators working on large-scale international projects across a wide range of typologies. Their approach is deeply collaborative and transdisciplinary, bringing together architects, designers, engineers, and landscape professionals to explore multiple perspectives depending on the nature of each project.

Snøhetta has completed a series of world-renowned cultural and landmark projects, including the Bibliotheca Alexandrina in Egypt, the Oslo Opera House and Ballet, and the Lillehammer Art Museum in Norway. Current projects include the National Pavilion of the September 11 Memorial Museum at the World Trade Center site in New York, as well as urban and landscape developments that aim to merge local identity, sustainability, and public experience.

In 2004, Snøhetta was awarded the Aga Khan Award for Architecture, and in 2009, the Mies van der Rohe Award. The studio is the only practice to have won the World Architecture Award for Best Cultural Building twice in consecutive years: in 2002 for the Bibliotheca Alexandrina and in 2008 for the Oslo Opera House and Ballet, consolidating its international prestige.

Kjetil Trædal Thorsen (born 1958 on the coastal island of Karmøy, Norway) is a co-founder of the studio and a multiple award-winning architect. He is a visionary and humanist designer who has redefined the boundaries of contemporary practice. Under his leadership, Snøhetta has produced iconic, sustainable structures that are highly sensitive to their cultural context, combining technological innovation with a profound environmental awareness. Thorsen’s work is recognized for its focus on social interaction, sustainability, and the creation of spaces that foster human connection and sensory experience, establishing a benchmark in contemporary global architecture.

Craig Dykers (born 1961 in Frankfurt, Germany) is also a co-founder of the studio and director of its New York office. Snøhetta has earned a reputation for maintaining a deep integration of landscape, architecture, and urban experience across all its projects. Key works include the Bibliotheca Alexandrina in Egypt, the Oslo Opera House and Ballet, the National Pavilion of the September 11 Memorial Museum in New York, and the redesign of Times Square. Professionally and academically active, Dykers has been a member of the Norwegian Association of Architects (NAL), the American Institute of Architects (AIA), and the Royal Society of Arts in England. He has served as a diploma juror at the Architectural College in Oslo and as a distinguished professor at City College, New York. He has delivered numerous lectures across Europe, Asia, and the Americas, and has undertaken public art installation projects, many of which explore the interplay between context, landscape, and human experience.

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Published on: October 21, 2022
Cite:
metalocus, ADELA BONAS
"Snøhetta to overhaul former Natural History Museum of Lille" METALOCUS. Accessed
<https://www.metalocus.es/en/news/snohetta-overhaul-former-natural-history-museum-lille> ISSN 1139-6415
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