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Collection Center: The Latest Architecture and News

Sordo Madaleno and építész stúdió Selected to Design New Natural History Collection Center in Debrecen, Hungary

Sordo Madaleno, in collaboration with építész stúdió and Buro Happold, has been selected to design the 43,000-square-meter New Debrecen Collection Center for the Hungarian Museum of Natural History. Debrecen, Hungary's second-largest city, is currently the focus of significant urban and university-related development, including plans to relocate the Hungarian Museum of Natural History from Budapest to the edge of Debrecen's Great Forest. The proposed Collection Center is conceived as a facility dedicated to the controlled storage and study of more than 11 million objects, drawing conceptual inspiration from traditional Hungarian clay vessels, structures historically used to protect and preserve. The project would mark the first European cultural commission for the Mexican architecture practice, which operates studios in London and Mexico City.

Sordo Madaleno and építész stúdió Selected to Design New Natural History Collection Center in Debrecen, Hungary - Image 1 of 4Sordo Madaleno and építész stúdió Selected to Design New Natural History Collection Center in Debrecen, Hungary - Image 2 of 4Sordo Madaleno and építész stúdió Selected to Design New Natural History Collection Center in Debrecen, Hungary - Image 3 of 4Sordo Madaleno and építész stúdió Selected to Design New Natural History Collection Center in Debrecen, Hungary - Image 4 of 4Sordo Madaleno and építész stúdió Selected to Design New Natural History Collection Center in Debrecen, Hungary - More Images+ 8

Dutch Museums to Build a Joint Collection Center

Four Dutch cultural institutions are collaborating to build a new repository for their vast national collections. The new Netherlands Collection Centre (CC NL) will be built in Amersfoort, east of The Hague, and will replace the current depositories belonging to Paleis Het Loo, the Dutch Open Air Museum, the Rijksmuseum and the Cultural Heritage Agency of the Netherlands, combining these collections in a central hub. With an area of 30,000 square meters, the building will house 675,000 objects, and is scheduled for completion in 2020.