John Glenn Institute Permanent Exhibition
Project Vision
Entering the institute, visitors stand before glass panels carrying a faint image of a confident 15-year-old John Glenn. A tan-colored, rectangular-grid terrazzo floor defines the installation’s approach and suddenly gives way to black and dark gray circular, concentric bands suggesting outer space. Within these dark bands stand three large, curved panels supported by columns made of aircraft aluminum. Orbiting in parallel, the panels invite visitors to enter. Outward facing panel sides display dramatic, symbolic imagery identifying each major theme. Inner facing panels contain that theme’s timelines and supportive imagery. At the center of the exhibit and the panels’ orbital paths is a rising metal cylinder that can be viewed by visitors through small cutout windows.
Protruding outside the institute and into the main interior hallways is a long, black structure housing nine separate display cases of archival memorabilia. The structure, wrapped in black terrazzo panels, carries engraved illustrations of Glenn’s historic 1963 orbital flight path, complete with the earth’s continents, radio tracking stations, and inset aluminum stars marking critical constellations used for navigation.
Project Details
Design Team
Tom Webster (Principal in Charge), Oscar Fernandez (Design Director), Neils Braam, Jackie Call (Designers), Michelle Geissbuhler (writer)
Design Firm
Eyethink
Consultants
Miller/Watson (architects), Lincoln Street Studio (architect of record)
Fabricators
Colortext (graphics installation), WKI (aluminum fabrication), Waters Edge (engraving)