
Johnston Marklee has rapidly become one of the US’ most exciting practices. After years of completing sensitive and complex domestic-scaled works in Los Angeles, the office vaulted to prominence after being selected to curate Chicago’s 2017 architecture biennial. Since then they’ve completed and embarked on numerous significant projects - none more so than the Menil Drawing Institute.
The Menil, notable as the first public museum in the US dedicated to the art of drawing, was founded in Houston by art collectors and philanthropists John and Dominique Menil in 1987. The collection has been comfortably ensconced in Houston’s Montrose neighborhood since 1988, in Italian architect Renzo Piano’s first American built work. The building strikes a fine balance in scales, negotiating its institutional nature with its residential context. It’s this complexity - and its uniquely focused program - that made an addition such a complex challenge. “We traveled to see precedents,” Johnston Marklee co-founder Sharon Johnston says. “The research was intense, but we didn’t find one building that set the precedent.”
