Headquarters The Society's Manhattan headquarters, at
Park Avenue and East 70th Street on the
Upper East Side, is a nine-story building faced in smooth red
Oklahoma granite designed by
Edward Larrabee Barnes / John M.Y. Lee Architects in 1980. Since it replaced some old
brownstones on one of the city's most prestigious streets, Barnes gave the building a strong facade to continue the line along Park, and set it back from East 70th with a terraced garden buffering it between the street and the older houses on that block. The semicircular window on the upper story and variations in the color and finish of the granite are intended to evoke Asian cultures.
Paul Goldberger, architecture critic at
The New York Times, called it "an ambitious building, full of civilized intentions, some of which succeed and others that do not". In the former category he put the interiors and the overall shape; in the latter he included the facade. In 1999, it was closed for 18 months so that new interiors, designed by
Bartholomew Voorsanger, could be built. During that time the society used the former
Christie's Manhattan offices on
59th Street as a temporary home. The completed renovation included a
atrium and cafe. The expansion doubled the museum's exhibition space, allowing the society space for special exhibitions in addition to displaying the Rockefeller Asian art collection on display.
Robin Pogrebin of
The New York Times said in 2011 that the Asia Society is "perhaps best known for the elegance of its headquarters and galleries on Park Avenue at 70th Street". The
Hong Kong complex, dedicated on February 9, 2012, is situated on the site of a former British military explosives magazine overlooking
Victoria Harbour and includes numerous restored military buildings. The project was designed by architects
Tod Williams and Billie Tsien. The Asia Society Hong Kong Center was established in 1990.
Asia Society Texas Center in Houston The Texas Center first opened in 1979. The current building, located in the
city's museum district, opened on May 6, 2012, and was designed by architect
Yoshio Taniguchi. With a cost of $50 million, the Texas Center has a
modernist style and was built with German-origin
Jura limestone personally inspected by Taniguchi and his employees. The building includes glass walls, steam generated from the roofline, and a garden as significant elements.
Asia Society Northern California The Northern California Center was established in 1998 at the entrance to
Silicon Valley in the
San Francisco Bay Area.
New York Museum At its 70th Street headquarters, The Asia Society Museum is host to traditional, modern and contemporary exhibitions, film screenings, literary events and performances. The holdings include works that date from the eleventh century BCE to the nineteenth century CE and include Chinese ceramics of the Song and Ming periods as well as works by contemporary Asian and Asian diaspora artists. The museum's collection of traditional objects stems from a donation from Asia Society founder John D. Rockefeller 3rd and Blanchette Ferry Hooker Rockefeller, who contributed a number of items in 1978. The society began actively collecting contemporary Asian art with a 2007 initiative. A major renovation was completed in 2001, doubling the size of the four public galleries and expanding space for educational programming and including conference spaces and an auditorium. The headquarters also houses a museum shop and café. Forbes has listed the Garden Court Cafe (now the Leo Café) on its All-Star Eateries in New York list several times. == Leadership ==