After years in the making, the New Museum has officially reopened on the Bowery with a major expansion that is about more than added space. The new iteration of the institution rethinks what a museum is, how it functions and who it’s for. The new OMA-designed building, which will open to the public on Saturday, March 21, adds nearly 62,000 square feet to the institution and effectively doubles its exhibition capacity, bringing the total footprint to roughly 120,000 square feet.
The original SANAA-designed tower is still vertical and introspective, while the new building leans outward, with horizontal galleries, open circulation and a more porous relationship to the city. Bridges, shared galleries and a central atrium stitch the two together, making it easy to move fluidly between them.
The museum’s expansion didn’t just add galleries; it also has added significant infrastructure for making things. There are artist studios, a permanent home for the New Museum’s incubator NEW INC, education spaces and multi-use areas designed for workshops, talks and events. At the top of the building, these programs converge in what Shigematsu described as the “brain,” essentially a zone for production, discussion and experimentation.























