Shaker Museum Taps Selldorf Architects for New $15 Million Facility

  • August 05, 2020 11:49

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Counter for Cutting Cloak Material, 1850s. Church Family, Mount Lebanon, NY Pine, maple pulls, brass tacks, red paint Accession Number: 1950.382.1
Shaker Museum Mount Lebanon

Shaker Museum has selected Selldorf Architects to create its new permanent facility in downtown Chatham, New York, to exhibit its comprehensive collection of more than 18,000 pieces of Shaker material culture and accompanying archives. Like the objects themselves, the physical building will embody Shaker values of inclusion, innovation, and equality to create a museum that both tells the Shaker story and is responsive to the needs of the community in Chatham, Columbia County, and the surrounding Hudson Valley. It was also announced that Nelson Byrd Woltz Landscape Architects will collaborate on the project. The museum will retain and maintain the historic Shaker site in Mount Lebanon, New York.

Building for new Shaker Museum facility, Chatham, NY.

After more than a decade without a facility in which to show its collection, the new campus located at 5 Austerlitz Street will provide ample space for exhibitions and respond to the need for inclusive community gathering spaces through its exhibitions and robust programming. The facility encompasses the renovation of an historic building that anchors downtown Chatham and the creation of an expansive addition to provide the cultural institution with almost 30,000 square feet of space over four floors.

The physical space’s design embodies and perpetuates the core ideals that were at the foundation of Shaker culture but will apply them in a modern and relevant context and form. The design and the programming envisioned for this new facility re-examines the experience and interaction of a visitor with a museum while keeping practicality and inclusivity at the forefront, ranging from the arrival experience to common space usage to exhibition accessibility.

Oval box made at Canterbury, NH by Elder James Johnson for Elder Rufus Bishop, ca. 1850.
Shaker Museum Mount Lebanon

During a period of isolation and economic contraction, this new Shaker Museum illustrates a bold optimism for the future and radical enthusiasm for the notion of community and its power to transform. The $15 million project is expected to break ground in 2021 and be completed in 2023. To date, $6.3 million has been raised in the capital campaign to support the facility, which includes a major gift from Columbia County resident Jack Shear and a $1.569 million grant from Empire State Development and the Regional Economic Development Council.

Lacy Schutz, Shaker Museum Director said, “Shaker objects are recognized for their innovation, ingenuity, and simplicity, telling a wonderful story of their ideals and the highest and best values of America. During this current moment of social distancing, it is vital to remember that community – the bedrock of Shaker beliefs – is an integral part of the human condition. With today’s stark divisions, the Shaker legacy of equality and inclusion offers a roadmap for creating sustainable, meaningful lives through the cooperation afforded by community. In this context, this new museum takes on more urgency and relevance. We are delighted to be working with Annabelle Selldorf to create a place that truly embodies Shaker ideals.”

Shaker Museum estimates that the new facility will draw 30,000 visitors each year who will spend a projected $1.75 million annually in the region. Shaker Museum expansion is expected to have a total economic impact of $12.7 million and support 113.5 jobs in the Capital Region according to an analysis commissioned by the cultural institution. The museum will continue to own and manage the historic Shaker Village at Mount Lebanon, which was the largest and most successful utopian communal society in America for 160 years from 1787 to 1947.

With more than 18,000 objects, Shaker Museum stewards the most comprehensive collection of Shaker material culture and archives. It is the leader nationwide among organizations devoted to Shaker history. The museum’s collection can be viewed online at www.shakerml.org.


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