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steeped in past, stepping to future
Concord Museum is on the brink of its own transcendent moment — an extensive expansion
The museum will undergo a $13 million expansion. An architectural rendering is above. (DesignLAB Architects )
The renovation will add space for more education programs at the museum. (DesignLAB Architects )
By Nancy Shohet West
Globe Correspondent

At the Concord Museum, they’re calling the party “Barn Voyage.’’ But the levity of the event’s title belies the significance of what it means to the 131-year-old institution.

The groundbreaking on Feb. 24, which will include the razing of the barn-like Cummings Davis Building, is the first big step in a $13 million renovation and expansion endeavor.

Executive director Peggy Burke hastens to point out that the large brown barn only looks like an antique structure from Thoreau’s time – in fact, it was built around 1980, so no priceless architectural history is being destroyed in this undertaking.

“When we met with the architects, our first question was whether we could retrofit our existing buildings,’’ Burke said. “But it soon became clear that what we had wasn’t cost-efficient or energy-efficient. So it’s coming down.’’

The upcoming changes to the museum go far beyond the replacement of one building.

When the project is done next year, the museum’s campus will boast a 110-seat lyceum for meetings and lectures, new gallery space, new education space, more room for administrative offices, a more efficient parking lot, a bus dropoff area, and an outdoor program area. Museum staff is also working with a preservation architect to create a replica of Henry David Thoreau’s cabin at Walden Pond.

The museum has been “bursting at the seams,’’ in Burke’s words, for years. The reconstruction will meet numerous needs, from providing more space for the many educational programs the museum runs to providing visitors to Concord with a welcoming overview of sightseeing and historical landmarks in the region, she said.

Getting the look of the new construction right was just as important as filling the museum’s programming needs, Burke said. “The original 1930 museum had a very residential feel to it. It was created as a collection of period rooms.’’ In the 1990s, renowned architect Graham Gund designed a new entrance and more exhibit space.

What followed were months of discussion and rumination among Burke, members of the museum’s Board of Governors and Building Committee, and professionals from DesignLAB Architects about how to seamlessly integrate new and old, Burke said.

“We spent a long time with the architects getting the scale and the materials exactly right. Too much glass would be bad for the exhibits and would also be visually jarring to the surrounding historical district. We needed something that would fit in with the neighborhood.’’

They also needed something that would meet the myriad restrictions involving the surrounding wetlands and zoning regulations.

A new 13,000-square-foot Education Center will support the museum’s hallmark object-based learning approach, in which artifacts such as Ralph Waldo Emerson’s desk and one of Paul Revere’s lanterns help tell the story of the historical events they represent. These programs benefit about 12,000 students and teachers a year — not only from Concord and surrounding suburbs but also from communities in Lawrence, Lowell, and Everett. The museum pays for transportation and waives program fees for such field trips.

And future visitors will notice the difference from their first step in the door, Burke said.

“One goal from our strategic plan is to be more helpful for the visitor community. We’re dedicating quite a bit of space to this,’’ he said.

“The Concord Museum is an extraordinary institution doing really innovative things, particularly on the education side,’’ said Robert Miklos of DesignLAB, principal architect on the project. “The museum’s new image will be open, inviting, contemporary, a resource for the community. We’ve designed it as a gateway that will orient visitors from all over the US and the world to the many important sites of Concord.’’

With nearly $11 million of the $13 million goal already raised, the museum is well on its way even before ground has been broken. The hope is for construction to conclude in 2018.

Nancy Shohet West can be reached at nancyswest@gmail. com.