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Dutch Toytown
October 15, 2002
While the renovation of the neighbouring Rijksmuseum
is held up as an example of quality development, the controversy
surrounding the Stedelijk Museum is a prime illustration of how
it shouldn't be done.

impression design Siza |
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Background
Early 1990s. Four architects - Rem Koolhaas, Wim Quist, Carel
Weeber and Robert Venturi - are invited to make proposals to improve
the Stedelijk Museum. Robert Venturi's proposal wins.
1993. The extension project is deemed too ambitious. The
programme has to be changed to stay within the budget.
November 1994. Venturi's commission is retracted totally
unexpectedly because, claims the client, the architect hasn't amended
his proposal. The architect claims he was never officially requested
to do so. Meanwhile, Alvaro Siza is appointed to prepare a new design.
A wave of protest ensues because European regulations governing
public tenders have been ignored. Tenders in line with the European
procedures are then invited from four architects, and from Siza.
June 1996. Announcement that Siza is to design the Stedelijk
Museum extension.
January 1998. The first design proposal was presented. Redevelopment
to proceed in two phases - phase 1 involving renovation and new
construction, phase 2 replacement of the New Wing (Sandberg Wing)
on Van Baerlestraat.
June 2000. The City Council decides that Phase 1 of redevelopment
can start.
October 2000. That decision is suspended because of new plans
for a possible annex to the Stedelijk Museum along the Zuidas (Southern
Axis) development corridor, and because funding has not been finalised.
It is decided to defer a final decision until after the municipal
elections in 2002.
February 2002. A city council majority agrees to the plans
for renovation and extension, including construction of a collection
centre in Amsterdam North, despite the lack of a balanced budget.
September 2002. Presentation of the municipal budget for
2003. The redevelopment plans for the Stedelijk Museum are definitively
scrapped. Siza's extension will not go ahead, and neither will the
collection centre in Amsterdam North. But the 2003 budget also states:
'The municipal executive will conduct a feasibility study for a
new "Museum for the 21st century" within the framework
of the Zuidas development. A portion of the original redevelopment
plans for the Stedelijk Museum can be completed on the new site.'

impression design Siza |
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The Plot Thickens
The story of the Stedelijk Museum's proposed renovation/redevelopment
is turning into a soap opera featuring more episodes than you'd
have thought possible. And each episode is more hilarious than the
previous. On Monday September 30 Amsterdam's local TV station announced
that a new Stedelijk Museum would be built in the Beatrix Park.
The news that the municipal executive had decided to pull the plug
on the original redevelopment plan came as a bolt out of the blue
for many of those involved.
According to the executive, funding for a collection centre in Amsterdam
North and for two new wings on Museumplein had not been finalised,
and only the major renovation work could proceed. On September 4
the Stedelijk Museum had distributed a glossy brochure to relations,
friends and colleagues. In an accompanying letter the directors
Rudi Fuchs and Stevijn van Heusden wrote that alderman for culture
Hannah Belliot had 'unequivocally' stated at a press briefing on
August 30 that the municipal executive was 'fully behind the aims
and ambitions of the Stedelijk Museum'. The letter continues: 'This
autumn Ms Belliot intends to present a proposal to the city council
concerning the budget imbalance'. Was this a charm offensive, were
they burying their heads in the sand, or did they really know no
better? Siza, the architect for the renovation/extension, was certainly
left in the dark. News that his scheme had been scrapped reached
him through a journalist, and he let slip that after 6 years of
work he wasn't interested in renovation work alone. To which alderman
Belliot retorted by saying, 'We won't be implementing Siza's design.
The city authorities are working on new renovation plans'.
A gathering to announce cancellation of the extension plan was used
to launch the proposal for a museum for 21st-century art on the
Zuidas, intended as Amsterdam's 'La Défense' district. 'It's
to be a museum of the future, and I'm thinking high-tech, multi-media,
design, redefining boundaries', explained alderman Belliot.
What had been intended as a compromise from aldermen for finance
Dales and Belliot is getting more intriguing every day in the media.
What is the status of this idea? And how seriously should it be
taken? A new museum, perhaps an annex to the Stedelijk Museum, financed
from surplus revenue generated from the sale of land along the Zuidas
- surplus value generated, at least in part, by the very location
of the museum on the Zuidas. An interesting detail: the proposed
site for the new museum in Beatrix Park is the property not of the
city authorities but of the ING Bank, and it currently houses a
school and church. Demolition of the school, currently in use, will
be required to facilitate the new development.
The Stedelijk Museum struck back with an all-or-nothing option.
'The collection must be kept together. Temporary exhibitions are
in part assembled from this permanent collection. An annex is therefore
unacceptable to the museum management. Either the whole museum relocates
to the Zuidas or it remains at Museumplein, and Siza's redevelopment
scheme can then be implemented.'
Everyone's a loser in this game of poker. City of Amsterdam.
Relocating the Stedelijk Museum to the Zuidas would represent a
major loss for Museumplein and the Stedelijk Museum itself. If the
North-South metro line is built, there will be no station at Museumplein
and thus no logical transport link between the museums. Stedelijk
Museum. No matter which plan is implemented, the museum will
have to make do with inadequate accommodation for some years. Amsterdam
City Council. The Dutch capital's municipal executive has shown
itself - for a second time - to be a wholly disreputable building
client, first by firing Venturi and now Siza. What we are now witnessing
is a power struggle between egos that has nothing to do with ideas
on cultural policy or urban development. As the Frank van Klingeren
once said, 'We back in a Dutch Toytown again'.
Marina van den Bergen
Translation: Billy Nolan
more information:
Stedelijk Museum
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