Grimshaw is pleased to announce the opening of the Phillip and Patricia Frost Museum of Science (Frost Science) in Miami, Florida. This exciting new 250,000 square foot facility brings together an aquarium, planetarium and science museum onto one campus in downtown Miami’s Museum Park. Taking advantage of the city’s plentiful sunshine, ocean breezes from nearby Biscayne Bay and views to a growing downtown skyline, the inventive architecture of the museum furthers Miami-Dade County’s cultural offerings in a sophisticated, contemporary building.
“To echo the sentiments of many in the community, it has been a privilege to have been part of this journey,” said Grimshaw Partner Vincent Chang, “bringing science and true contemplation of the world around us into the heart of vibrant, ever-changing downtown Miami.”
Grimshaw’s response to the project brief resulted in a complex of four buildings situated in an open-armed stance, inviting visitors to walk amongst them and opening up the building to the outdoors. This conscious effort to link the building to the outdoors
connects the world at large to the science exhibits within and reinforces the museum’s ties to both the city and nearby marine
habitats. An open-air atrium threads between the buildings connecting them to one another and creating a dynamic environment
that directly connects the community to the experience of the outdoors and the city around them.
The shapes of each individual building are dynamic and varied, sculpted to take advantage of filtered light and breezes. The
ensemble is united by a soft white colour palette expressed through a variety of materials that create unique patterns and shadows
across the building facades. The bar-shaped buildings of the North and West Wings are clad in a faceted, pixelated geometrical
texture that allows the passage of the sun to animate the buildings across daylight hours. The aquarium, more organic in shape, is
nestled between the wings, appearing in shape as a water droplet from above and not unlike the prow of a ship when approached
from the ground. The iconic planetarium, spherical in shape, completes the site, creating an intriguing landmark that contrasts the
more rigid building massing of adjacent developments.
The aquarium building lies at the heart of the site and is where most guests will begin their exploration. Grimshaw has created
a unique, vertically-oriented experience that allows guests to encounter aquatic ecosystems at various depths from an open-air
rooftop “surface” level to more intimate, immersive galleries “below the waterline.” This portion of the museum is dominated by the
500,000-gallon Gulf Stream Aquarium. The aquarium’s unique cone shape spans three floors to provide a cornerless environment for ocean-cruising wildlife. The bottom of the cone resolves in a massive, 31-foot circular viewing window that allows visitors a dramatic view up and into the aquarium from below, immersed in the blue depths of the Gulf Stream. Other viewing points offer glimpses to the same aquarium including carefully placed portholes and an open-air deck with an aviary and other exhibits highlighting Florida ecosystems.
“It has been such a joy for our team to see firsthand visitors move throughout the building, simultaneously engaging with the
exhibits and enjoying the spectacular views from the building’s many open terraces,” said Chang.
The opening of Frost Science is the culmination of a process that began in 2009 with outreach workshops that polled local
residents to find out what kind of science museum they aspired to visit. The museum is pursuing LEED Gold certification utilising
a variety of environmental strategies including a rooftop solar farm, rain water cisterns, and a building design that takes maximises the abundant sunshine and breezes from the bay. The museum is also accessible via public transportation including Miami’s Metromover, Metrobus, the Miami Trolley and the city’s bikeshare program. The museum will be open 365 days a year bringing science and discovery to Miami residents and visitors alike in a new, inspired setting.
Photography
Christian Hoenigschmid-Grossich, Vincent Chang