Brooklyn Botanic Garden Visitor Center Opens to the Public

Brooklyn Botanic Garden Visitor Center Opens to the Public:

© Albert Vecerka/Esto
Accompanied by Mayor Bloomberg yesterday in an early morning ribbon cutting, City-based practice Weiss/Manfredi celebrated the grand opening of the new Brooklyn Botanic Garden Visitor Center. Embedded into an existing hillside at the Garden’s northeast corner, the sinuous glass building appears as a seamless extension to the existing topography as it leads into the 52-acre garden. In addition, the $28-million Visitor Center incorporates numerous environmentally sustainable features—most notably a 10,000-square-foot living roof—that are aimed toward earning LEED Gold certification. The project has been recognized by the New York City Public Design Commission with an Award for Excellence in Design.
Continue reading after the break for the architects’ description.



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The 20,000-square-foot Visitor Center was conceived as a new threshold between the city and Brooklyn Botanic Garden (BBC) that transitions from an architectural presence at the street to a structured landscape within the Garden. The Visitor Center invites visitors from Washington Avenue into the Garden via a curved glass trellis before opening into major garden precincts like the Japanese Hill-and-Pond Garden and Cherry Esplanade.

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The primary entry from Washington Avenue is visible from the street; an additional entry from the elevated Overlook and Ginkgo Allée at the top of the berm bisects the Visitor Center, revealing framed views of the Japanese Hill-and-Pond Garden, and descends through a stepped ramp to the main level of the Garden.

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The curved glass walls of the Visitor Center offer veiled views into the Garden, their fritted glass filtering light and deterring bird strikes. In contrast to the southern face of the building, the north side is built into a preexisting berm, which increases thermal efficiency. Its clerestory glazing—along with the fritted glass on the south walls— minimizes heat gain and maximizes natural illumination. A geoexchange system heats and cools the interior spaces, and a series of rain gardens collect and filter runoff to improve storm-water management.

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The leaf-shaped living roof hosts over 40,000 plants—grasses, spring bulbs, and perennial wildflowers—adding a new experimental landscape to the Garden’s collection.

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The green roof will change throughout the year, literally transforming the nature of the architecture each season. The Washington Avenue side of the building features a pleated copper roof that echoes the Garden’s landmarked 1917 McKim, Mead & White Administration Building and will ultimately weather to green.

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Nearly 60,000 plants were installed around the Visitor Center, including cherry, magnolia, and tupelo trees; viburnums; native roses; and three rain gardens full of water-loving plants. In combination with the green roof, this ambitious installation seamlessly weaves the Visitor Center into the green tapestry of the Garden.

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“Brooklyn Botanic Garden is an extraordinary oasis in the city and a living museum with a collection in constant flux,” stated Marion Weiss and Michael Manfredi, principals at . “We envisioned the Visitor Center as a living interface that creates an invitation from the city into the Garden—a demonstration of the compelling reciprocity between architecture and landscape. Just as the Garden inspires wandering, we designed the center so that it is never seen in its entirety but is experienced cinematically as an unfolding place of discovery.”

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On Saturday, June 2, BBG invites visitors to Amble: BBG’s June Jubilee to experience the new Visitor Center and explore the Garden with free admission, music, and special urban gardening activities.
Architects: Weiss/Manfredi

Location: Brooklyn Botanic Garden, New York

Visitor Center Area: 20,000sf

Living Roof Area: 10,000sf

Event Space Area: 2,500sf

Landscape Area: 42,000sf of new plantings
Architectural Team: Marion Weiss and Michael A. Manfredi, Design Partners; Armando Petruccelli, Project Manager; Hamilton Hadden, Justin Kwok, Project Architects; Patrick Armacost, Jeremy Babel, Christopher Ballentine, Cheryl Baxter, Michael Blasberg, Kian Goh, Michael Harshman, Paúl Duston-Muñoz, Aaron Hollis, Jonathan Schwartz, Michael Steiner, Na Sun, and Yoonsun Yang
Structural and Civil Engineer: Weidlinger Associates Consulting Engineers

MEP/FP and IT Engineer: Baum & Bolles Consulting Engineers

Landscape Architecture Consultant: HM White Site Architects


Environmental Consultant: Viridian Energy & Environmental, LLC

Geothermal/Geotechnical Engineer: Langan Engineering and Environmental Services

Lighting Design Consultant: Brandston Partnership, Inc.


Curtain Wall Consultant: R.A. Heintges & Associates


Food Service Consultant: Ricca Newmark Design

Cost Estimator: AMIS, Inc.

Retail Consultant: Jeanne Giordano Ltd.


AV/Acoustics/Security Consultant: Cerami & Associates, Inc.

Security Consultant: TM Technology Partners


Traffic Consultant: Sam Schwartz Engineering

Construction Manager: LiRo Group

General Contractor: E.W. Howell
Materials: Architectural cast-in-place concrete; curtain wall of custom-fritted insulated glass and aluminum; canopy of custom-fritted laminated glass and stainless steel, architectural exposed structural steel, custom copper roof, green roof, wood paneling milled from ginkgo trees harvested on-site; specialty acoustic ceiling and wall panels

Brooklyn Botanic Garden Visitor Center Opens to the Public (1) © Albert Vecerka/Esto
Brooklyn Botanic Garden Visitor Center Opens to the Public (2) © Albert Vecerka/Esto
Brooklyn Botanic Garden Visitor Center Opens to the Public (3) © Albert Vecerka/Esto
Brooklyn Botanic Garden Visitor Center Opens to the Public (4) © Albert Vecerka/Esto
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Brooklyn Botanic Garden Visitor Center Opens to the Public (9) © Albert Vecerka/Esto
Brooklyn Botanic Garden Visitor Center Opens to the Public (10) © Albert Vecerka/Esto
Brooklyn Botanic Garden Visitor Center Opens to the Public (11) © Albert Vecerka/Esto
Brooklyn Botanic Garden Visitor Center Opens to the Public (12) © Albert Vecerka/Esto
Brooklyn Botanic Garden Visitor Center Opens to the Public (13) © Albert Vecerka/Esto
Brooklyn Botanic Garden Visitor Center Opens to the Public (14) © Albert Vecerka/Esto
Brooklyn Botanic Garden Visitor Center Opens to the Public (15) © Albert Vecerka/Esto
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Brooklyn Botanic Garden Visitor Center Opens to the Public (19) © Albert Vecerka/Esto
Brooklyn Botanic Garden Visitor Center Opens to the Public (20) Courtesy of Weiss / Manfredi
Brooklyn Botanic Garden Visitor Center Opens to the Public (21) Courtesy of Weiss / Manfredi
Brooklyn Botanic Garden Visitor Center Opens to the Public (22) Courtesy of Weiss / Manfredi
Brooklyn Botanic Garden Visitor Center Opens to the Public (23) Courtesy of Weiss / Manfredi



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