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United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
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InsideThe Museum
The Architecture
The Art (Gravity, Loss and Regeneration)
The Art (Consequence, Memorial)
Inside the Museum (The Hall of Witness)
Inside the Museum (The Hall of Remembrance)
Outside the Museum
Architect James Ingo Freed
Inside the Museum   
Outside the Museum 
The Art 

Outside the Museum 
  Inside the Museum 

The Architecture 
Inside the Museum   
The Art 

OUTSIDE THE MUSEUM

The Museum's north and west (15th Street) sides with a view of the Hall of Remembrance.
The Museum's north and west (15th Street) sides with a view of the Hall of Remembrance. JG/United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
At first glance, the building's exterior seems benign. On three sides — east, south, and west — the building is enveloped in limestone, the most common building material in official Washington. A large portal fronts the 14th Street entrance to the east, bowing gracefully outward to assume a formal presence in the urban landscape beyond. On the building's north side, pyramid-shaped roofs top four red-brick towers.

To the west, along Raoul Wallenberg Place — named after the Swedish diplomat who rescued thousands of Hungarian Jews — the semidetached, six-sided Hall of Remembrance stands as a stately companion to the nearby Washington Monument and Jefferson Memorial. The Museum's limestone and brick exterior engages the neoclassical Bureau of Engraving and Printing to the south, and the Victorian red-brick Auditor's Building to the north.

But all is not quite as it seems. Everywhere the building contains elements of concealment, deception, disengagement, and duality.

The curved portico of the 14th Street entrance — with its squared arches, window grating, and cubed lights — is a mere facade, a fake screen that actually opens to the sky, deliberately hiding the disturbing architecture of skewed lines and hard surfaces of the real entrance that lies behind it. In Freed's words, "Visitors must pass through the limestone partition to enter a concrete world." This motif of contrasting appearance and reality is repeated throughout.

The Museum's east side (14th Street) entrance.
The Museum's east side (14th Street) entrance. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

The Museum's west (15th Street) entrance with a view of the Hall of Remembrance.
The Museum's west (15th Street) entrance with a view of the Hall of Remembrance. Norman McGrath/United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

Along the north brick walls, a different perspective reveals a roofline profile of camp guard towers, a procession of sentry boxes. Above the western entrance, a limestone mantle holds a solitary window containing 16 solid "panes," framed by clear glass, reversing the normal order and obscuring the ability to look in or out.

Above left: Limestone mantles hold reversed windows.<br><br>
Above right: The Hall of Remembrance walls joined by an open corner<br><br>
Above left: Limestone mantles hold reversed windows.

Above right: The Hall of Remembrance walls joined by an open corner

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

The Museum's north wall from the perspective of a visitor standing in line waiting to enter.
The Museum's north wall from the perspective of a visitor standing in line waiting to enter. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

The Hall of Remembrance seems almost separated from the main building. Its six commanding walls, joined by open corners, appear as freestanding tablets. What look like windows are, instead, blocked-over blind recesses. The combined effect hints at the troubling messages found inside the Museum.