6 East Wheelock Street
Hanover, NH 03755
United States
Designed by Tod Williams Billie Tsien Architects, the New Hood nearly doubles the museum’s exhibition spaces and triples its teaching facilities
On January 26, 2019, the Hood Museum of Art at Dartmouth opened the doors to its renovated and expanded facility. Designed by Tod Williams Billie Tsien Architects| Partners (TWBTA), the expanded museum ties together the College’s academic and research priorities with an emphasis on the arts at Dartmouth. The Hood sits at the heart of Dartmouth’s campus on the historic Green. The museum’s central location signifies the importance art plays in the Dartmouth experience.
The Hood’s encyclopedic collection is one of the largest of its kind in the United States, comprising more than 65,000 works spanning a variety of media and historical periods. The renovation and expansion ensures that these works of art will be preserved, seen, and utilized by students, faculty, and visitors from around the globe. The building is a hybrid of newly constructed facilities and restored and updated spaces from the original 1985 Charles Moore building, and provides active spaces for teaching, exhibition, exploration, and dialogue. It also redirects traffic on campus, creating a central artery facing the Dartmouth Green with a walkway through the museum to the campus arts district.
Phil Hanlon, President of Dartmouth, explains, “The renovated Hood is an inviting front door for the arts at Dartmouth that puts our educational mission front and center. Fresh, state-of-the-art spaces enable our students and faculty to engage directly with the 65,000 objects in the Hood’s collection, presenting an ideal environment for experiential learning and one that makes the Hood a national model teaching museum for the 21st century.”
John Stomberg, Director of the Hood Museum of Art, adds, “The new Hood is a place for active engagement. The art installations and programs are deeply connected to our ever-changing societies and cultures. The Hood will continue preserving the past and embracing the present but will aspire also to shape the future by choreographing vital encounters with important works of art. In short, the new Hood is a responsive museum, committed to the exchange of beliefs and ideas that characterize life today.”
Says Tod Williams from TWBTA: “We have worked closely with the team at the Hood Museum and Dartmouth College to design a progressive teaching museum while preserving many of the distinctive features of the Charles Moore building. The conversation throughout has been both pedagogical and architectural. The renovation of and addition to the existing Hood creates a complementary dialogue between old and new, extending the identity and functions of the institution well into the future.”
The impetus for the expansion was an increased demand from students and faculty to gain deeper access to the Hood’s collections through more and improved galleries and classrooms. The newly constructed building is seamlessly interwoven with the historic Moore structure and brings the entire museum up to today’s codes while updating the original galleries to new environmental and conservation standards.
The expansion increases the Hood’s exhibition space by 42 percent to 16,350 square feet, adds three classrooms with the latest object-study technology, and increases the total number of galleries from 10 to 16, with the addition of six new galleries. The expansion increases the Hood’s overall square footage by more than 50 percent, to 62,400 square feet. The project budget for the renovation and expansion is 50 million USD, which has been raised through private donations.