One of Atlanta’s most cherished museums has begun construction on a project that will make it more than 50 percent larger, and new renderings provided to Urbanize Atlanta illustrate more clearly than ever what that expansion will look like.
As a means of commemorating its 10th anniversary, the National Center for Civil and Human Rights is refreshing its current facilities and expanding its recognizable downtown building with two new wings—totaling about 24,000 square feet—to add classrooms, more exhibits, and event spaces. The project is expected to cost $56 million.
The current NCCHR, which opened with 42,500 square feet in June 2014, was designed by the late, award-winning architect Philip Freelon in partnership with HOK. Its designs were chosen following an international competition.
The Perkins & Will-designed expansion project calls for new wings added around the NCCHR’s symbolic, multicolored façade, both of them swooping from Pemberton Place around toward Ivan Allen Jr. Boulevard.
The ongoing NCCHR expansion will be substantial enough to temporarily close the museum between January and August 2025, according to project officials.
The center’s new wings are scheduled to open sometime in the fall of next year.
Protective fencing installed around the museum’s perimeter will remain in place through the duration of construction, per officials. The museum’s Pemberton Place and Ivan Allen Jr. Boulevard entrances will remain accessible throughout 2024.
To foot the bill for a larger facility, NCCHR’s “Fulfilling the Vision” capital campaign has raised more than $52 million, with a goal of eventually bringing in $56 million. Additional…
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