Mashantucket Pequot Museum and Research Center

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Innovative Design and

Excellence in Architecture with Steel


National Winner

Mashantucket Pequot
T
HE MASHANTUCKET PEQUOT

Museum and Research MUSEUM AND RESEARCH CENTER,


LOCATED IN MASHANTUCKET, CT,
is a tribally owned and operated com-

Center plex that showcases the story of the


Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Nation,
their history, the histories and cul-
tures of other tribes, and the region’s
natural history.
The Museum consists of permanent
exhibits, the gallery for temporary
exhibits, a 320-seat auditorium, a

Modern Steel Construction / July 1999


restaurant, classrooms, a museum
shop and administrative offices. The
Research Center houses a library, a
children’s library, reading rooms,
stacks, a research department, storage
facilities and conservation laborato-
ries.
The $100 million complex, whose
striking silhouette results from the
individual formal articulation of its
three principal program elements—
Gathering Space, Museum and
Research Center—provides a visual,
spatial and textural link to the cultur-
al heritage of the Mashantucket
Pequot Tribe. The circular Gathering
Space, which is the formal and sym-
bolic center of the institution, unifies
the Research Center with the

Modern Steel Construction / July 1999


Juror’s Comments:
The museum and
research center was a
clear winner. The
elegant use of steel to
create a series of
dramatic spaces was
truly inspirational.
Nested in a wooded
site, it is a contextual
landmark. Clean,
simple detailing with
slender structural
components are some
of the building’s
greatest attributes. The
museum and research
center is completely
successful.

Museum and provides a view


of the forest. It is the dramatic
arrival point for the complex,
accommodates formal celebra-
tions, and is the point from
which visitors access all areas.
Its radial structural system and
orientation on the site, with
respect to the cardinal points,
establish the overall order and
geometry for the project.
The intersection of a half cone
and half cylinder offset in plan,
which recalls the tribe’s his-
toric fort, is the generating
geometry for the Gathering
Space. Leaning pipe columns
Project Team
Project: Mashantucket
Pequot Museum and
Research Center
Architect: Polshek
Partnership, New York, NY
Owner: The Mashantucket
Pequot Museum and
Research Center
Structural Engineer: Ove
Arup & Partners, New York,
NY
General Contractor: Cives
Steel Company, Gouverneur,
NY

arranged in a radial pattern


around the semicircular base
provide immediate support of
the glass wall. Lateral support
of these columns is provided
by a horizontal arched vieren-
deel pipe truss, which trans-
mits the thrust loads of the
wall into the floor diaphragm
of the elevated dining area.
Roof support is provided by
sloping 36” I-beams that are
radially arranged and span
from the top of the wall
columns to the main roof truss.
The main truss spans 180’ and
functions as a three-dimen-
sional tied arch, built of a com-
bination of I-beams and pipe
sections. The roof beams are
both supported by the arch
and provide its stability.

Modern Steel Construction / July 1999

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