Bakgård: Featuring Deichmanske Munch & Stenersen              
              
           
      
      
        
      
      
        

Featuring Deichmanske Munch & Stenersen

Hav Eiendom AS presents a new museum and a new library along the Oslo waterfront. The following cast:


Munch Museum with Stenersen Collection, invited:


Tadao Ando – Japan
Zaha Hadid Architects – England
Abalos Herreros Arquitectos – Spain
Foreign Office - Spain / England
Tony Fretton Architects – England
Gigon Guyer Architekten – Switzerland
REX Architects – USA
Henning Larsen Tegnestue – Denmark
Kristin Jarmund Arkitekter – Norway
CODE Arkitektur – Norway


Munch Museum with Stenersen Collection, pre-qualified:


NONAME 29 – Spain
Heneghan Peng Architects – Ireland
Nieto Sobejano – Spain
Diller Scofido Renfro – USA
Kengo Kuma Associates – Japan / France
ALA – Finland
Christ Gantenbein Architects & Lie Øyen Arkitekter – Switzerland / Norway
Sauerbruch Hutton – Germany
Ghilardi Hellsten Arkitekter – Norway
Manuelle Gautrand Architecture – France


Deichmanske Library, invited:


Toyo Ito – Japan
Xaveer de Geyter Architects – Belgium
Wiel Arets Architects – Netherland
Lacaton Vassal Architectes – France
Smidt Hammer Lassen – Denmark
David Chipperfield Architects – England. Local architect: DivA Architects - Norway
Behnisch Architekten – Germany
LAR / Fernando Romero – Mexico
Snøhetta – Norway
A-lab – Norway


Deichmanske Library, pre-qualified:


Allmann Sattler Wappner Architekten – Germany
Morger Dettli Architekten – Switzerland
SeARCH – Netherland
Sou Fujimoto, ADEPT – Japan / Denmark
Lund Hagem Arkitekter, Atelier Oslo – Norway
Team 3 AS – Jensen Skodvin Arkitektkontor AS, Arne Henriksen Arkitekter
AS, Arkitekt Carl Viggo Hølmebakk – Norway
Plasma Studio – Argentina / Germany / England / Italy
70* nord & Dahl og Uhre Arkitekter – Norway
Lundgaard Tranberg Arkitekter AS – Denmark
Kister Scheithauer Gross Architekten und stadtplaner – Germany

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

This reeks of Hollywoodism. Roll Film.

Pierre said...

After a second look, there are no Swedes in it.

Anonymous said...

looks very promising for more internationally recognized architectural monuments in Norway and in Oslo, unless, if it even will be built at all, the winning project is going to be a boring compromise after it has been stripped of architectural concepts and qualities in order to please everyone.

Pierre said...

Would you not save money with, say, five good proposals instead of 20? Is it necessary with that many?