Within the winning team led by Nieto Sobejano Arquitectos, SWA’s landscape solutions for the Dallas Museum of Art (DMA) are fundamental to addressing the institution’s renovation goals. The transformation includes vibrant gathering spaces that communicate the Museum’s core values of community and environmental responsibility. These additions help increase the DMA’s visibility and present artwork in new ways.
In their approach to DMA’s transformation, the team echoes the greenery of neighboring Klyde Warren Park and the Nasher Sculpture Center, reimagining the museum as a garden. The existing green spaces were discrete and disconnected, while the proposed landscape design envelopes the museum, reaches out to visitors on all sides, expresses itself from terraces at distinct levels, and captivates passersby on adjacent streets.
Fort Worth Museum of Modern Art
SWA was selected to provide design services for the new Modem Art Museum of Fort Worth located across the street from the renowned Kimbell Art Museum designed by architect Louis Kahn. The direction for the landscape concept here evolved from the vision of Japanese architect Tadao Ando, whose design was selected as the winning entry in an international invitati...
Dallas Arboretum: A Tasteful Place
A year-round “food oasis” awaits visitors at A Tasteful Place, a new edible/display garden within the Dallas Arboretum. A continuation of SWA’s Arboretum work (which includes Red Maple Rill and the Children’s Garden), A Tasteful Place provides visual and hands-on education about plants and herbs that can be used in visitors’ daily cooking and explored in...
California Academy of Sciences
One of San Francisco’s first sustainable building projects, the California Academy of Sciences supports a stunning 2.5-acre green roof. Emphasizing habitat quality and connectivity, the project has received two LEED Platinum certifications.
The building’s architectural team, the Renzo Piano Building Workshop (RPBW), invited SWA Group and horticultural c...
The Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Center for the Visual Arts
The original Stanford campus museum was damaged in an earthquake in 1989. With help from major namesake donors to the museum, significant site improvements, expansion and seismic renovation improvements were accomplished. SWA provided master plan updates and full landscape architectural services including pedestrian pathways; two major terraces for displaying ...