04.12.2024

(EN) Lightness and Transparency at Naala Badu, Art Gallery of New South Wales

(EN)

The Art Gallery of New South Wales‘ new building—Naala Badu, meaning ‘seeing waters’— is a series of light-filled pavilions and outdoor terraces that step down towards Sydney Harbour. In contrast, the lowest level of the building houses a unique, windowless underground fuel bunker, originally built during World War II and previously inaccessible to the public. This space now serves as the home for a series of innovative art projects.

Completed in 2022, the award-winning museum building is the centerpiece of the $344 million transformation and expansion of AGNSW’s art museum experience. Designed by Pritzker Prize-winning architects Kazuyo Sejima and Ryue Nishizawa of SANAA, the building has almost doubled the exhibition space and created a unique art campus comprising two buildings and an art garden.

Studio Ongarato, award-winning placemaking studio in Melbourne designs wayfinding signage for expansion at the Art Gallery of NSW

(EN)

Studio Ongarato’s wayfinding signage for Naala Badu has been designed to meet the evolving expectations of 21st-century art museum visitors. With a focus on transparency, the digital display of real-time ‘what’s on’ information enables visitors to navigate the building directly by following exhibition content, rather than a traditional approach of numbering spaces.

Studio Ongarato, award-winning placemaking studio in Melbourne designs wayfinding signage for expansion at the Art Gallery of NSW

(EN)

Replacing traditional introductory wall graphics, new signage system displays exhibition identification, introduction, and sponsorship content in a unified digital format. A language of finely detailed stainless-steel portals holding hovering bezel-less digital screens where content is hero and sign form is reductive, providing AGNSW with the flexibility to offer dynamic, changeable information to all visitors — particularly students, teachers, and artists.

Other non-digital signage, such as for amenities adopts a lightweight framed approach, while Donor information floats across articulated sandstone surfaces resonating with and receding within the minimalist, SANAA-designed spaces.

Studio Ongarato, award-winning placemaking studio in Melbourne designs wayfinding signage for expansion at the Art Gallery of NSW
Studio Ongarato, award-winning placemaking studio in Melbourne designs wayfinding signage for expansion at the Art Gallery of NSW
  • (EN) Architects

    (EN) Kazuyo Sejima + Ryue Nishizawa / SANAA

  • (EN) Technology Consultant

    (EN) AeGres

  • (EN) Photography

    (EN) Clinton Weaver