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First Look at the LACMA David Geffen Galleries Designed by Peter Zumthor

LACMA David Geffen Galleries Overview
The new horizontal form spanning Wilshire Boulevard. (Photo: Iwan Baan)

The first photographs of the long-anticipated David Geffen Galleries at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) have been unveiled, captured by architectural photographer Iwan Baan. Designed by Pritzker Prize-winning architect Peter Zumthor, in collaboration with Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, the building marks the culmination of a process spanning more than two decades.

The museum recently offered an exclusive preview of the building in its raw architectural state, ahead of the installation of artworks. Major construction was completed at the end of 2024, and portions of the lower levels are already accessible to visitors. The galleries are scheduled to officially open in April 2026, when they will house LACMA's permanent collection.

The David Geffen Galleries stretch in a horizontal, free-flowing form of glass and concrete, curving along Hancock Park and spanning Wilshire Boulevard. The design reflects LACMA's broader mission to transform into an inclusive, non-hierarchical museum that celebrates the city's diverse communities and the world's artistic traditions.

With this addition, the museum expands its gallery space from approximately 130,000 square feet to 220,000 square feet across its 20-acre campus. Elevated nearly 30 feet above street level, the main floor of the new building consists almost entirely of exhibition space, offering galleries with varied scales, configurations, and lighting—from naturally lit perimeter spaces to fully enclosed interior rooms. The horizontal, single-level layout eliminates traditional cultural hierarchies, placing all works on the same plane and allowing curators to shape shifting narratives and juxtapose art from different eras and cultures.

At the park level, seven semi-transparent pavilions support the main floor and provide spaces for public amenities, including a theater, retail, dining, educational facilities, and outdoor programming. The W.M. Keck Foundation Plaza serves as a central open-air venue for film screenings, live music, talks, and art activities. Landscaped plazas and sculpture gardens featuring native and drought-tolerant plants, along with site-specific artworks, are integrated throughout the new campus.