Construction update on the Harvard Art Museum

Alumni returning to Cambridge this spring will find the Fogg expansion looming large.

The Fogg from above, wrapped and being remade

Even the heaviest of heavy construction can seem like precision watchmaking. Take the reconstruction of the Fogg Art Museum.

It began in early 2010 by removing much of the original structure beyond the Quincy Street façade, then propping up what remained while excavating deep underground to create new spaces. That required shoehorning massive concrete pumps onto the narrow site (hemmed in by Quincy and Prescott streets, Broadway, and the swooping Carpenter Center ramp) to drop tons of slurry, just so, into forms far below. During this mild winter, an enormous crane was anchored to the new subterranean structure; it finally began lifting the steel girders into place for the new structure that will rise within, around, and over the skeletal Fogg—a rebirth, timed to the early arrival of spring in New England. (Harvard Art Museums documents the project’s progression in a stunning set of elevated and aerial photographs taken through the changing seasons; see https://tiny.cc/dhbubw).

As this multihundred-million-dollar task has proceeded, the Quincy Street façade has been wrapped in white tarps to protect the work and craftsmen within—almost as if Christo had been retained to make the site one of his monumental sculptures. The project, surrounded by the campus and hard by Cambridge Rindge and Latin high school, has been a feast for sidewalk superintendents, as intimate a viewing experience as watching a painter at work in her studio. (And it has been timely for construction fans, given the completion of the Law School’s massive multiuse building; the still-early work on the Business School’s Tata Hall for executive-education students; and the dearth of other Harvard mega-projects in this post-recession era.) 

Befitting the nation’s preeminent academic art museum, the reconstruction of the Fogg is a work of art.

You might also like

The True Cost of Grade Inflation at Harvard

How an abundance of A’s created “the most stressed-out world of all.”

Harvard Magazine Questionnaire: The True Cost of Grade Inflation

A faculty committee is recommending changes to grading at Harvard College to limit an overabundance of A's. Add your voice to the conversation.

Harvard Students, Alumni to Compete at the 2026 Olympics

Six Crimson athletes are headed to the XXV Winter Games in Milano Cortina. 

Most popular

Harvard’s Epstein Probe Widened

The University investigates ties to donors, following revelations in newly released files.

Stirred, Shaken, and Sung

At the end of Pink Martini’s Carnegie Hall debut this past June, a conga line broke out in the audience and bounced its way up and down...

Harvard Faculty Group Proposes Limits on A Grades

The grade inflation measure requires a full faculty vote, expected in the spring.

Explore More From Current Issue

Cover of "Harvard's Best" featuring a woman in a red and black gown holding a sword.

A Forgotten Harvard Anthem

Published the year the Titanic sank, “Harvard’s Best” is a quizzical ode to the University.

Anne Neal Petri in a navy suit leans on a wooden chair against an exterior wall of Mount Vernon..

Mount Vernon, Historic Preservation, and American Politics

Anne Neal Petri promotes George Washington and historic literacy.

Man in a suit holding a pen, smiling, seated at a desk with a soft background.

A Congenial Voice in Japanese-American Relations

Takashi Komatsu spent his life building bridges.