Asia Society and Museum

The Asia Society, an international cultural organization, is headquartered at Park Avenue and 70th Street in a distinctive eight-story red granite building designed in the 1980s by Edward Larrabee Barnes. The task was to retrofit Barnes’s granite landmark for a new century—expanding the museum’s public presence while upgrading its core facilities. The program called for large, flexible galleries, a restaurant, an improved auditorium, and an overall reimagining of the building’s public interface. From concept through final detailing, Martin Stigsgaard collaborated with Voorsanger Architects, shaping a design that transforms Barnes’s granite monument into a more open, accessible, and culturally resonant museum.

The architectural transformation unfolded across four key fronts:

  • reconfiguring office floors for efficiency and environmental performance,

  • expanding exhibition spaces,

  • enhancing visitor services such as retail and support areas,

  • and creating an original, welcoming precinct for members and guests.

Project Size
75,000sf

Location
New York, NY

Cutting Through Stone: A Matta-Clark Inspiration

The design was inspired by Gordon Matta-Clark’s radical incisions into existing structures, which exposed hidden relationships and unexpected connections. Similarly, the intervention carved new visual and physical linkages throughout the building. A dramatic four-story stair now anchors the composition, weaving together the auditorium in the basement, the main lobby, and two levels of galleries above. Constructed in glass, the stair doubles as a light shaft, reinforcing vertical connections between public spaces.

At the heart of the project is a two-story garden court beneath a curved glass canopy—a contemporary gesture that merges architectural clarity with an Asian-inflected geometric sensibility. This luminous court brings daylight into the interior while giving the institution a new sense of transparency and identity.

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