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The Historic New Orleans Collection
Announcement

HNOC’s $38 Million Museum Expansion Set for Grand Opening Weekend April 6–7

March 14, 2019

A modern courtyard with light brown walls features a glass entrance labeled Ticonderoga Wing. A sign for Café Cour is visible on the right. Theres a staircase on the left, and reflections of the sky and clouds can be seen in the glass.

On Saturday, April 6, the Historic New Orleans Collection will throw open the doors to a $38 million expansion of its museum facilities, offering a significant addition to the French Quarter’s cultural attractions. Located at 520 Royal Street, and made possible in part through generous donations from the institution’s local, national, and international supporters, the new campus will add more than 35,000 square feet to HNOC’s footprint and double its publicly available spaces.

A two-story building with a yellow facade and black shutters, featuring large arched windows and balconies. Sunlight creates a lens flare effect across the upper part. The ground floor has covered storefronts and a central entrance.

Across the street from HNOC’s original location at 533 Royal Street, the new exhibition center comprises a meticulous restoration of the historic Seignouret-Brulatour Building and courtyard, as well as a brand new, purpose-built rear building. This unique melding of old and new spaces is unlike anything else in the French Quarter.

“This project has been in the works for almost 15 years,” said Priscilla Lawrence, HNOC president and chief executive officer. “Our board and our staff were determined to bring the historic building—its famous courtyard and layered history—back for locals and visitors alike to enjoy.”

A modern courtyard with light brown walls features a glass entrance labeled Ticonderoga Wing. A sign for Café Cour is visible on the right. Theres a staircase on the left, and reflections of the sky and clouds can be seen in the glass.

The site will house a continuing exhibition on the history of the French Quarter (the only such installation of its kind in the historic district), changing exhibitions, dynamic interactive displays by new media artist Xiao Xiao and local film company Côte Blanche Productions, a hands-on educational space for all ages, a fully restored Aeolian pipe organ, a larger footprint for HNOC’s museum shop, and Café Cour, a museum café run by Dana and Christina Honn of Carmo. Following HNOC’s other locations, admission to the new center will be free.

A vintage photograph of an empty bus interior is displayed on a wall. Adjacent, an exhibit showcases reproduced old newspaper pages, highlighting titles like Monitor de la Louisiane and New Orleans Tribune. A wooden bench and ticket machine are in the foreground.

“This expansion is part of our decades-long effort to be the greatest possible local history museum,” said HNOC Deputy Director Daniel Hammer. “We want New Orleanians to know us as a critical place for engagement about who they are and where they come from; no matter where they live, their story is part of the Historic New Orleans Collection.”

The first major changing exhibition at the site will also be HNOC’s first large-scale exhibition of contemporary art. Art of the City: Postmodern to Post-Katrina, presented by The Helis Foundation, will feature more than 75 painters, sculptors, and more whose works reveal the influence New Orleans has on artists.

A vibrant and diverse crowd of people fills an elaborately decorated room with colorful windows and curtains. The group includes individuals with varied attire, hairstyles, and expressions, creating a lively and dynamic scene.

“With the expansion we hope to change, or add to, how people think of the French Quarter,” said Hammer. “We want to expand people’s appreciation for the dynamism of the French Quarter as a historic resource, as the place where their ancestors arrived, lived, worked, visited, suffered, thrived, and more. This 78-square-block grid can offer context for nearly everyone’s historic identity, whether they were born here or moved here two days ago.”

“We hope it becomes a cultural touchstone and a source of pride for everyone, because it reflects how deeply we value our history, all of it.”

A courtyard scene with people engaged in various activities. Two people sit and converse near a table with books, while another reads. A person stands on an upper balcony. The setting is surrounded by old buildings with arches and green shutters.

The Historic New Orleans Collection’s new exhibition center will open to the public Saturday, April 6, 2019. Grand opening festivities will continue Sunday, April 7, with a block party in the 500 block of Royal Street from 1 to 5 p.m. The afternoon event will feature free performances from Bon Bon Vivant, the Confetti Park Players, Detroit Brooks and more, and food and drink will be available for purchase throughout the block. Both of HNOC’s Royal Street facilities will be open from 10:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. that day, and admission to each site is free.

A display of an animal pelt hangs on a brick wall with a sign above it asking, What animal do you think this came from? The background shows an exhibition area with wooden floors and informational panels.

The block party is presented by HNOC with major support from Chase and J.P. Morgan. Additional support has been provided by Waggonner and Ball Architecture/Environment and Gambel Communications.

The new exhibition center’s regular hours will be 9:30 a.m.–4:30 p.m., Tuesday–Saturday, and 10:30 a.m.–4:30 p.m. on Sunday. More information is available online at www.hnoc.org.

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