MOSH's operations have outgrown the 77,000-square-foot facility; building a new museum will significantly expand the organization’s capacity to serve more students and visitors. Early projections estimate that by building a new facility at the Jacksonville Shipyards, MOSH will be able to serve 58,000 students and 469,000 visitors each year.
Moving to the Northbank also allows MOSH to meet the growing demand for exhibits and programs that inspire innovation. The new museum will comprise dedicated areas for exhibitions, classes, and events, while also incorporating a new-and-improved space for the Bryan-Gooding Planetarium. This reimagining of the museum reinforces MOSH’s role as a civic institution and destination for accessible, immersive, and technologically advanced experiences.
“Over the past eight months, MOSH’s Board of Trustees and the Genesis Oversight Committee led a competitive process to identify the best possible design partners. We knew this project required the expertise of both a national firm with deep experience in museum architecture, and a local partner with existing relationships and knowledge of the Jacksonville market. Together, we know DLR Group, kasper architects + associates, and SCAPE will bring our vision to life,” said Bruce Fafard, President and CEO of MOSH.
DLR Group is a global integrated design firm specializing in cultural arts projects nationally and internationally. DLR Group brings to MOSH a multidisciplinary team with deep museum experience, including the Cleveland Museum of Natural History, the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, the Museum at Bethel Woods (Woodstock Museum), the Smithsonian American Art Museum’s Renwick Gallery, and the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in Philadelphia.
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“MOSH will have a dramatic impact on the Jacksonville region, telling its unique story of human and natural history and culture, innovation, and current science,” said DLR Group Senior Principal Paul Westlake, FAIA, who leads the firm’s Cultural+Performing Arts practice. “We are honored to be part of this groundbreaking project and are fortunate to be partners with both kasper architects and SCAPE. Erik Kasper and his team impressed us with their design ethos, knowledge of Jacksonville processes, and their deep community-service efforts. Kate Orff and the SCAPE team believe landscape architecture can enable positive change in communities by regenerating living infrastructure and public landscapes.”
“DLR Group and the design team will capitalize on this opportunity to create a unique, immersive cultural experience that is reflective of the rich history of Jacksonville. In addition to creating an assemblage of technology and history, this project will serve as a social anchor for the local community, a space defined by notions of flexibility and a true integration between the building and its site,” said Vanessa Kassabian, AIA, LEED AP, DLR Group Senior Design Leader.
MOSH is currently in negotiations with the Downtown Investment Authority to develop a term sheet for a four-acre parcel at the Jacksonville Shipyards. The $85-million project is expected to take three years. Pre-construction site work could begin as early as Q1 2022, following all necessary site approvals through the DIA.