Flashback: Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum / Safdie Architects

Flashback: Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum / Safdie Architects:

© Timothy Hursley

Flashback: One of Archdaily’s goals is to bring you up to date information about projects that are being designed and constructed around the world. We’ve created a new category to cover inspiring projects that were constructed between the 1990′s and the early 2000′s.

Architect: Safdie Architects
Location: , Jerusalem,
Client: Holocaust Martyrs’ and Heroes’ Remembrance Authority
Total Cost: $90 million
Project Area: 190,521 sqf
Project Year: 2005
Photographs: Timothy Hursley

© Timothy Hursley

The rebuilding of the Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum includes a new visitors’ center (Mevoah), a new history museum replacing the existing museum constructed in 1953, a Hall of Names, a synagogue, galleries for Holocaust art, an exhibitions pavilion and a learning and visual center. In addition, new underground parking and facilities for tour buses are located adjacent to a new entrance piazza. The overall program quadruples the permanent exhibition space. The mevoah is an arcaded concrete pavilion roofed by skylights and trellises, which cast ever-changing shadow patterns. It is reminiscent of a Succah. The lower level accommodates a restaurant and other public services. The historic museum consists of a mostly underground prismatic structure 16.5 meters high and 183 meters long (54 x 600 feet) that cuts through the Yad Vashem hillside, penetrating from the south and protruding to the north. A network of skylit underground galleries lines both sides of the prism.

© Timothy Hursley

The Hall of Names, located toward the end of the historic museum, is a conical structure extending upward 9 meters (30 feet) and housing the personal records of all known Holocaust victims. A reciprocal cone, penetrating deep into the Jerusalem bedrock below, echoes the upper chamber and commemorates those whose names will never be known. The 20-hectare (50-acre) site also includes the Children’s Holocaust Memorial and the Transport Memorial, designed by Moshe Safdie and completed in 1987 and 1995, respectively, as well as the Hall of Remembrance, administrative offices, an education and archival center and the Valley of the Communities.

Text provided by Safdie Architects.

© Timothy Hursley

© Timothy Hursley

© Timothy Hursley

© Timothy Hursley

© Timothy Hursley

© Timothy Hursley

Flashback: Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum / Safdie Architects © Timothy Hursley Flashback: Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum / Safdie Architects © Timothy Hursley Flashback: Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum / Safdie Architects © Timothy Hursley Flashback: Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum / Safdie Architects © Timothy Hursley Flashback: Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum / Safdie Architects © Timothy Hursley Flashback: Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum / Safdie Architects © Timothy Hursley Flashback: Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum / Safdie Architects © Timothy Hursley Flashback: Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum / Safdie Architects © Timothy Hursley Flashback: Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum / Safdie Architects © Timothy Hursley Flashback: Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum / Safdie Architects © Timothy Hursley Flashback: Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum / Safdie Architects © Timothy Hursley Flashback: Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum / Safdie Architects © Timothy Hursley Flashback: Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum / Safdie Architects © Timothy Hursley plan © Safdie Architects plan © Safdie Architects



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