Placed at the inner tip of a peninsula, in the centre of Norway, the building becomes an integrative element of the landscape that further develops originally employed strategies and formal expressions to arrive at a highly differentiated design. It aims at the lowest impact on landscape and nature while displaying a high iconic value within the function as a museum and cultural heritage. The museum is spatially distributed across the area to enhance solar radiation according to simulations. This constructs a composition of units, arranged in an ecology of clusters based upon negotiating parameters from building programme, topographical relations and environmental performance. Each unit is developed from principles derived from vernaculer architectural Sami culture, employing a series of sustainable strategies that are arranged within parametric formation models.