Project development In 2005 the United Arab Emirates put forward to the French government the idea of creating a museum in the Emirates bearing the name of the Louvre. Discussions were initiated in June 2005, when an Abu Dhabi delegation led by Sultan bin Tahnoon al-Nahyan, chairman of the
Abu Dhabi Authority for Culture & Heritage visited Paris and met counterparts at the
Louvre. A month later, another delegation including
Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan, then Minister of Information and Culture of the United Arab Emirates, discussed the project with interlocutors in the French government, including
Foreign Minister Philippe Douste-Blazy and
Culture Minister Renaud Donnedieu de Vabres. The choice of Nouvel had been first suggested by
Thomas Krens, then the director of the
Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation and adviser to Abu Dhabi on the development of Saadiyat Island. The negotiations and the project itself were publicly revealed by French daily in September 2006. The project initially generated controversy, including an op-ed and petition against it by curators
Françoise Cachin,
Jean Clair and . Louvre director
Henri Loyrette was also reported to have initially opposed the project, which in the early phase he did not defend or promote publicly. But the Louvre's position became more favorable in the course of the contract negotiation, as it managed to secure significant benefits for itself. The agreement detailing the partnership and licensing arrangements was signed on by respective representatives of the French and UAE governments. That agreement was ratified by the
French Parliament on 9 October 2007, after
Jacques Chirac had been replaced as French President by
Nicolas Sarkozy. Even after leaving the presidency, Chirac remained a major supporter of the project. When announced in 2007, the museum was expected to open in 2012. On , the project managing agency, Tourism Development & Investment Company (TDIC), announced that the museum's opening would be delayed but gave no new date. According to the UAE newspapers
Gulf News and
The National, the delay came from a review of the emirate's economic strategy. In January 2012 it was announced that the Louvre Abu Dhabi's opening date would be 2015.
Construction Construction works at Louvre Abu Dhabi officially started on . The piling and enabling works package was awarded to the German specialized company
Bauer International FZE; the total of 4,536 piles in steel and reinforced concrete were completed on . Construction on the main phase of the museum began in early 2013 by a consortium headed by Arabtec, Constructora San José and Oger Abu Dhabi, under a $653 million contract. This stage included waterproofing and the two basement levels, along with four concrete pillars that will support the 7,000-tonne dome. Work on the construction of the gallery spaces and initial preparation for the dome began in the fourth quarter of 2013. On 5 December 2013, the first element of the museum's canopy was lifted into place. On 17 March 2014 TDIC announced the completion of the first permanent gallery structure to mark the first anniversary of the start of construction. At this time, it was claimed that a total of ten million man hours had been worked and 120,538 cubic meters of concrete used. On 22 September 2014, the final super-sized element in the canopy was fitted in place, marking a significant milestone in the museum's construction phase. In October, The Tourism & Development Investment Company announced that the Louvre Abu Dhabi was more than 50 percent complete.
Prefiguration exhibitions The Louvre Abu Dhabi first started sharing its collection with the public through an exhibition at the
Gallery One of the
Emirates Palace, entitled "Talking Art: Louvre Abu Dhabi." It was inaugurated by
Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan and
Nicolas Sarkozy on , the same day as the construction work officially started on Saadiyat Island. The exhibition presented the first 19 acquisitions for the institution, including a
Mamluk Quran from the 14th century, a 5th-century Fibula from
Domagnano, a Virgin and Child by
Bellini, and
Mondrian's
Composition with blue, red, yellow and black from 1922. In May 2014, the Birth of a Museum exhibition, featuring works shown in Abu Dhabi and a number of new acquisitions, opened at the Louvre in Paris. A number of new works were presented, including
Chirisei Kyubiki by the Japanese artist
Kazuo Shiraga and painted in 1960.
Inauguration and aftermath The museum was eventually inaugurated on by French President
Emmanuel Macron, Abu Dhabi Crown Prince (and
de facto ruler)
Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan and UAE Prime Minister and Emir of Dubai
Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum. Other personalities present at the inauguration included
Mohammed VI of Morocco and President of Afghanistan
Ashraf Ghani. The museum was opened to the public three days later. It welcomed more than one million visitors in its first full year of operations, of which 30-40 percent were UAE residents and 60-70 percent from abroad (mainly France, Germany, China, the UK, the US, India and the
GCC countries); this made it the 77th most visited museum worldwide in 2018. In February 2020, a
Fouquet's restaurant opened as the main catering amenity inside the museum, with a menu created in partnership with celebrity chef
Pierre Gagnaire. ==Design==