The EYE Film Institute located in Amsterdam, The Netherlands is a film archive and museum. It preserves and shows foreign and Dutch films. The museums collection includes 37,000 film titles, 60,000 posters, 700,000 photographs as well as 20,000 books. The oldest materials date back from the start of the film industry in the Netherlands which was in 1895.
The museum is located in the Overhoeks area of Amsterdam. There is a a cinematography museum which was formerly called Filmmuseum and was founded in 1952. Prior to that it was called the Dutch Historical Film Archive (founded in 1946). The Filmmuseum used to be situated in the Vondelparkpaviljoen from 1975 but in 2009, The Nederlands Filmmuseum merged together with Holland Film and the Netherlands Institute for Film Education as well as the Filmbank. Plans were announced for a new home on the north bank of Amsterdam's waterfront, just behind the Central Station and is connected to the free ferry. Queen Beatrix officially opened the new building on April 4, 2012.
Client: ING – Real Estate
Architect: Delugan Meissl Associated Architects (DMMA)
Consultants: Implementation planning - Bureau Bouwkunde Rotterdam bv
Structural engineering: Abt-Adviseurs in Bouwtechniek, Delft
HVAC (Heating, ventilation, and air conditioning): Techniplan Adviseurs Bv, Rotterdam
Building physics: Peutz bv, Zoetermeer
Main Contractor: Bouwbedrijf M.J. de Nijs en Zonen BV
Location: IJpromenade 1, 1031 KT Amsterdam
Start of planning 2005
Start Construction August 2009
Completion December 2011
6.300 m² Total floor area | 4 Cinemas | 315 seats | 1.200 m² Exhibition space | 90 m² Workshop | 1.200 m² Offices | 450 m² Information | 100 m² Museum shop | 100 m² VIP area | 1.050 m² (approx.) Bar & Restaurant
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Nice but for me the vignette is too much "weird". Don't know why should I focus my attention on that central edge?