SHARES

Designed by Herzog & de Meuron and Farrells, the museum contains 33 galleries along with several shops, multi-purpose halls, restaurants, cafes, a research centre and offices.
 
It consists of two volumes, one vertical and one horizontal, that intersect to form the shape of an inverted T.
 
The three-storey horizontal volume will contain the majority of the public facilities with the main entrance and foyer on the ground floor.
 
The entrance foyer is surrounded by four enclosed spaces containing a shop, lecture space, resource centre and gallery space and diagonally cut by a lightwell that contains the museum's main circulation.
 
The floor above this contains the majority of the gallery spaces, while a semi-submerged basement level contains additional gallery space along with a shop and cafe overlooking the bay.
 
A series of skylights above cuts through the floor plates and were designed to allow light into the main circulation spaces.
 
Rising 12 stories above the horizontal block, which is topped with a roof garden, is a slender tower that will contain office space and be topped with restaurants, bars and a sky garden.
 
This tower was designed to give the museum a presence on the harbour skyline. The facades are covered in horizontal louvres that have an LED lighting system integrated on the water-facing front, which can be used as a screen to display custom-commissioned works of art or as a billboard.
 
The M+ museum is one of 17 cultural venues being created as part of the West Kowloon Cultural District on Hong Kong's harbourside, which was masterplanned by Foster + Partners. The first of these was a mirror-clad pavilion that cantilevers out of a hillside near the M+ Museum, which opened in 2016.
 
Fit out of the museum is now underway ahead of its opening at the end of the year.
 
Source: Tom Ravenscroft