First Look: Herzog & de Meuron’s Perez Art Museum Miami

Early this afternoon, during a preview of his firm’s new building for the Perez Art Museum Miami, Jacques Herzog sat in a window seat in a second floor gallery and discussed what the building lacked. “It doesn’t really have a form,” he said, looking out at Biscayne Bay past rows of thin concrete columns supporting a trellis overhead. “It’s more about its permeability. There is so much form in Miami. We wanted to do something that shows the potential in this city to let in sun and vegetation.”

Early this afternoon, during a preview of his firm’s new building for the Perez Art Museum Miami, Jacques Herzog sat in a window seat in a second floor gallery and discussed what the building lacked. “It doesn’t really have a form,” he said, looking out at Biscayne Bay past rows of thin concrete columns supporting a trellis overhead. “It’s more about its permeability. There is so much form in Miami. We wanted to do something that shows the potential in this city to let in sun and vegetation.”
In a town where form is often everything and ornament is the vernacular—from Deco buildings in South Beach to Arquitectonica’s Atlantis Condominium (the square donut of a building seen in the Miami Vice credits) to the Zaha Hadid-designed residential tower rising yards from the museum—Herzog has a point. The museum reads as a bit contrarian.

Tucked between Biscayne Boulevard and a causeway that connects the mainland city to Miami Beach, the museum sits like a pavilion in what will eventually be a bayside park. A raised plaza conceals parking while the three-story, 200,000-square-foot structure is stacked above in a series of alternately protruding and recessed rectangular blocks. The trellis, a canopy of naturally finished wood, soars overhead, supported by the concrete columns, which are reinforced with steel plates to keep them skinny as a South Beach sunbather. It shades the plaza below, and a series of decks with enviable views surrounding the top floor administrative, education, and event spaces.