World Mammoth and Permafrost Museum - Siberia
Leeser Architecture is
an international renowned team, pioneers in combining media and new
technologies in architecture. They are known for setting trends and using
cutting edge design and research. And their latest achievement will be even
more outlandish: Their design for the World Mammoth and Permafrost Museum in
Yakutsk, Russia was ranked first place in the respective international
architectural competition.
Leeser specializes in designing museums. The fact that their
new one will be 450 kilometers from the Arctic Circle in the city of Yakutsk in
the Sakha (Yakutia) Republic does not phase them. The Museum and Research Center
will study mammoths and the permafrost (arctic permanently frozen ground).
The museum is designed to incorporate two basic parameters of its surroundings:
a harsh climate and a fragile ecological balance. One of the main goals was
that it should have a low environmental impact. Naturally, it will be well
insulated and totally self-sufficient.
The actual building will be raised 6 metres above the ground
on structural supports to minimize the heat transfer with the frozen surface
below. It will rise on one side to imitate the contours of the nearby hill. The
translucent cladding will visually reflect the irregular geometry of the
permafrost and the roof will have a double-glazed structure with Aerogel inserted between
the layers for insulation.
The structure will be self-sustaining thanks to the solar
cells and wind turbines it incorporates. Sunlight collectors on the roof will
also reduce energy consumption by directly lighting the museum rooms
below,containing moss and lichen gardens. Light monitors, positioned to disrupt
wind patterning and minimize snow drifting on the roof, regulate shades to
prevent heat loss.
The space inside will be divided into two big areas: one
will be the museum open to the public and the other will be the research
laboratories, closed to the public. The visitors however will be able to see the scientists at work, as encased escalators will pass through the construction
ascending to the museum floor. The hall also provides access to underground
Permafrost Galleries deep within the hill where visitors can view a recently
discovered intact woolly mammoth.
The project was designed in collaboration with the following
team, Landscape: Balmori Associates,
MEP/Structural: Arup, Environmental: Atelier 10, Wind and Mircoclimate: RWDI, Lighting: Tillet Lighting Design.













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