My Visit to the United States Memorial Holocaust Museum
By: Lucas Shubert
I need
to begin with a bit of site analysis, or rather the area around its site. The
parking and environmental conditions of the area surrounding the site are, of
course, not caused by the Holocaust Museum. But they did affect the overall
experience of my visit. Firstly, being in the vicinity of the National Mall,
many modes of transit were available. There was a bus and train access as well
as nearby parking. There was also a bicycle rental station a block away. The condition
of the green space near the building was good but lacked direct walking routes.
The
programmatic plan of the museum was a first floor lobby and assembly/memorial
area with three floors of exhibit above. The basement was designated for
children’s activities. There was a gift shop on the first floor as well. The
upper three exhibit floors created a sort of stepped spiral, conceptually
mimicking the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York. The overall essence of
the experience can best be described in a word: awful. The architect, James
Freed, succeeded at creating a series of built environments that suggest
darkness and despair.
The
first step of the Holocaust Museum experience worth note was waiting in line
for and stepping through the metal detector. That was a process I am not used
to when it comes to entering public buildings. The lobby was meant to give the
feeling of 1940’s train station in Germany about to ship a load of people to a
concentration camp. The entrance to the exhibit portion of the museum was
unorthodox in that people queued for one of three elevators that carried a
carefully controlled number of participants up to the top of the exhibit spiral
on floor three.
The
exhibit area was itself darkly colored, dimly lit and at times overly narrowed
to create crowding and discomfort. Usually the more dismal the visual content
became, the less comfortable the surrounding museum interior became. A seemingly
unlimited amount of time could be spent studying the presented material within
the museum. I spent about two hours moving my way down the three floors back to
the lobby. The last stop moving through the building was the Hall of
Remembering, which was a large, open assembly space that looked like it could
double as a synagogue, where one could light a candle if he or she chose.
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