Arts & Entertainment

Tampa Museum Of Art $80M Expansion Plan Unveiled During Big Reveal Monday

Get a first look at the expanded Tampa Museum of Art. Architectural drawings were released Monday morning.

TAMPA, FL — The Tampa Museum of Art announced Monday morning a transformative expansion plan for its downtown Tampa campus that will add a crystalline, four-story structure to the waterfront, significantly enhancing the visitor experience and expanding the museum’s education and event spaces.

When completed in 2024, the expansion will add approximately 51,000 square feet of new space along the Hillsborough River to its 25,000-square-foot renovation currently underway to double its exhibition spaces and triple its education spaces.

The museum's executive director said New York based Weiss/Manfredi Architecture/Landscape/Urbanism is designing the expansion and current renovation of the existing museum building.

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Weiss/Manfredi is an award-winning global design firm responsible for such iconic cultural landmarks as Seattle Art Museum’s Olympic Sculpture Park, Brooklyn Botanic Garden Visitor Center and the Baker Museum at Artis—Naples.

“This is a transformational project for Tampa and the wider region,” said Michael Tomor, the Penny and Jeff Vinik executive director at the Tampa Museum of Art at 120 W. Gasparilla Plaza. “After announcing our renovation earlier this year, our board and community stepped up to allow the museum to grow even further, providing overwhelmingly generous support for our community partnerships and expanded education programs.”

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“We are inspired by the potential of the Tampa Museum of Art renovation and expansion to create a dynamic and inviting community destination and are thrilled to continue working with the Tampa Museum of Art to realize this extraordinary vision,” said Marion Weiss and Michael Manfredi.

More than 80 percent of the $80 million budget for the current renovations and future expansion will be privately funded by the museum’s board of trustees, the foundation board of directors and other community supporters, museum patrons and members.

The lead gift toward the total $100 million campaign to expand the museum’s facilities and invest in the museum’s endowment is a matching gift from a community stakeholder who hopes to encourage other stakeholders to participate in growing Tampa’s cultural legacy.

The museum’s site redevelopment of Curtis Hixon Park, a key component of the expansion project, has been partially funded through a grant from the Community Revitalization Area tax fund (CRA) and includes work on new pedestrian plazas and refurbishment of pedestrian walkways on Cass Street.

In addition, county grant funding supporting the renovation and expansion design components has been committed by the Hillsborough County Commission, championed by Hillsborough County Commissioner Harry Cohen.

The Tampa Museum of Art celebrated its 100th anniversary in 2020, and its current building, designed by San Francisco architect Stanley Saitowitz, opened in 2010, three years after TMA became a nonprofit, independent from the city of Tampa. At that time, museum leaders anticipated a second phase of expansion and development, which is now underway.

“I think with this addition, people will look at Tampa differently. Having lived in the Tampa Bay area all of my life, this city has been very important to me. I believe that the cultural life of the city is key to our long-term success, and I believe that a fine art museum is key to that cultural life,” said Jerry Divers, chair of the Campaign Cabinet and president of the Tampa Museum of Art Foundation.

“The expansion of the museum is going to incorporate so many different amenities that will draw the community in and create a feeling of ownership,” said Tampa Mayor Jane Castor. “Looking at the future of the Tampa Museum of Art really goes hand-in-hand with the growth of our city as being very dynamic, very robust and having something for everyone here in the city of Tampa.”

Over the past three years, the museum trustees, foundation directors and outside consultants have been developing plans based on demand, usage and sustained annual growth in all departments.

In 2021, TMA began major renovations to enlarge programming spaces, dramatically expand the education center, and complete substantial repurposing of administrative and storage spaces to make room for additional galleries.

“We recognize that this expansion extends far beyond physical infrastructure, and our goal is to integrate the museum with the vibrant Riverwalk and downtown that surrounds it,” said Dianne Jacob, chair of the Tampa Museum of Art Board of Trustees. “The structure brings a huge ‘wow’ factor, but its welcoming communal spaces will bring the reinvented TMA to life for everyone.”

When completed, the project will establish an accessible pedestrian and cultural experience for both residents and visitors. The expansion will rejuvenate outdoor spaces that extend beyond the museum structure, including new landscaped public access points along Cass Street, creating a transition with pedestrian plazas between the public park spaces adjacent to the Riverwalk, Curtis Hixon Waterfront Park and two new dog parks.

It will also:

  • Expand the museum’s gross area from 69,000 to 125,000 square feet.
  • Expand the education space from 1,400 to more than 12,000 square feet. This involves adding a new auditorium and education wing, including four classrooms, a lobby, orientation spaces and a secure entrance, which will allow the museum to quadruple the number of students it serves per year from 6,000 to 24,000. Culinary arts classes on the third-floor rooftop area will also be added to its education program offerings.
  • Grow the exhibition and collection space from 14,800 to more than 43,000 square feet. This will enhance the viewing experience with five additional galleries, a renovated sculpture gallery, a flexible multimedia gallery space, and an art exhibition program within the special events ballroom. The expansion will particularly benefit art in publicly accessible spaces, in special event spaces, corridors, outdoor sculpture terraces, rooftop terraces, as well as outside sites redeveloped for public sculpture and convening.
  • Enhance the visitor experience with almost 12,000 square feet of space dedicated to a new covered entrance, lobby, store and café.
  • Triple the event space, from 7,200 to 25,600 square feet that can host dinners for 500 and other events.

“The doubling of our gallery space is so important and so wonderful, and the public area is going to be spectacular, something that will draw a lot of people,” said trustee emerita and former board chair Cornelia Corbett.

For information about supporting the museum’s Centennial Campaign, including naming opportunities, click here.

Founded in 1920, the Tampa Museum of Art houses one of the largest Greek and Roman antiquities collections in the southeastern United States. As one of the region’s largest museums devoted to the art of the time, the museum’s permanent collection also includes sculpture, photography, painting and new media.

New online programs add to the year-round studio art classes, lectures, and tours that provide children, teens and adults with opportunities to discover new perspectives and learn different art-making techniques. Likewise, through unique community partnerships, the museum offers outreach programs that provide art-therapy.

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